Help:How do I present a research project on FactGrid?: Difference between revisions

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== How do I state my own research on FactGrid? ==
* automatically as we have only registered users. Whatever you do it leaves a trace in "Version histories" and "User contributions"
* Create a research statement like [[Item:Q11305]] and fix that with the [[Property:P131]] on all data sets that have noteworthy work of yours to show
* Use [[Property:P17]] on any individual statement you cannot yet make with more than the knowledge of present research and risk estimates and working hypotheses!


== How do I see who is doing what of FactGrid ==
FactGrid has been created with the specific aim to function as a research database between the Gemwan National Library's GND and Wikidata. We do explicitly encourage projects of "original research" on FactGrid and we do not impose any "criteria of notability" on our participants. Data you publish with us can be presented with original document references, i.e. without references to published articles, we actually prefer the original document reference; and if a research project should want the database to keep track on infant mortality we would not object the creation of thousands of items on children who all died before adulthood &mdash; no matter how much detail you can give to the entries.  
Click "Recent changes" in the menu or explore the "Version history" of any item.


In FactGrid, relevance means relevance in the specific research project that collects these data. It is at the same moment important that individual research projects act with the required transparency. Neighbouring projects should know why we are collecting and presenting these data. Researchers should stand with their names for the potentially weird astonishing collections of data.


== What do I do with conflicting information ==
== Make your own research project visible in the FactGrid project area ==
The project area has its link in the left hand menu:


Wikibase allows the input of conflicting statements. A person can have two different birth dates. That is not undesirable - quite the contrary, it allows you to represent the wealth of documents which you have processed.
* [[FactGrid:Projects]]


You can, however, bring clarity into the future handling of the specific situation:
If you are running a bigger project on FactGrid, a project with more than one or two hundred Database Items organised around a specific question you should briefly advertise your project in the section so that other participants can understand what is going on. We will eventually add a menue on this area, but the present number of projects can still be handled on a single page.


# '''If it remains impossible to determine the correct date''' &mdash; make both statements with the respective references. They will now both occur in searches.
== Run your own project pages in the FactGrid project namespace ==
# '''If you can decide which of two dates research should continue to use''' &mdash; state both dates but upgrade or downgrade the alternatives by setting the arrows before the respective input fields before saving.
You are free to run your own project pages in the "project name space" on FactGrid. All these pages should have "FactGrid:" as the initialising string sequence in their page titles. The common header is needed to run specific searches on FactGrid that can separate project pages from Item pages for instance if that is of interest in a specific database search.
# '''If you can give reasons for your preference''' &mdash; use qualifying statements on each date: [[Property:P155]] "How sure is this" - you can add here a predefined statement from [[Proerty:P155|this list]] or you create an new Item which should be included in this list. Use [[Property:P73]] to set additional free notes on the case.
# '''If the proper answer should be acknowledged as your research'''  upgrarde your choice and downgrade the alternatives (as stated in 2). Use [[Property:P155]] to characterise your knowledge and add a [[Property:P196]] "reasoning" link to a new Item which you now create in order to refer to your personal thesis. Let us say this Q-Number is '''Q1234567'''.
::* use [[Property:P2]] in order to mark the new Item as a "[[Item:Q22848|FactGrid thesis]]"
::* state yourself with [[Property:P21]] as the author
::* date your FactGrid thesis with [[Property:P106]]
::* set a link to a blank page, which you will open with [[Property:P99]] and the prospective title '''https://database.factgrid.de/wiki/T-Q1234567'''. This will create a page of the respective Q-Number and here will now be free to write a complete article about the problem with your view. Your article can have chapters, it can refer to documents and research done in the field, it can have footnotes and images (format-wise just as any Wikipedia-article). It will be ''your'' article on the problem and people can use the article's Discussion page to offer their views on your work.


== Creating larger numbers of items in a mass input via QuickStatements ==
The "[[FactGrid:The Gotha Illuminati Research Base|Gotha Illuminati Research Base]]" provides examples how a project can use the namespace to present [[FactGrid:The Gotha Illuminati Research Base|sample searches]], pages on [[FactGrid:Gotha Illuminati Research Base Team|the participants]] or on [[FactGrid:Illuminatenaufsätze im Kontext der Spätaufklärung: Ein unbekanntes Quellenkorpus|specific projects]] within the bigger scope.
There are YouTube videos available that show how you create inputs with QuickStatements


* https://youtu.be/L0TYQ9LRRTQ
== Link your own "FactGrid Research Item" of your project to data objects ==
* https://youtu.be/bUpJN4IklJ8
Wikibase instances are designed to meticulously keep track on all the edits made on the installation. All Items, Properties and text pages come with version histories (see the tab above) that that list the entire respective editing process chronologically with the names of the accounts &mdash; an important feature that allows you to say precisely when you published a specific statement on an object, but insufficient, when it comes to presenting your work in a publication or a report that addresses the funding institution.


The tough part is to prepare your data. If you add individual statements you will always get autocomplete suggestions as soon as the database already has the item which you want to refer to. If you run a mass input your data will have to be precise: the Q-numbers, dates in the exact format definitions, geo-coordinates in the input standard (which by the way differs from the SPARQL output!) - all this will cause extra work. You will have a lot to do if you come from an old database which allowed text input as here you will find that cells have been filled in various formats and with additional statements which you have to transfer into separate qualifying statements...
We are therefore encouraging the creation of specific "FactGrid research statements" [[Item:Q11295]] which participants can now use to present on database objects such as [[Item:Q2080]] Letter Ernst II. Ludwig von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg to Johann Joachim Christoph Bode, Gotha, 1783-07-18" We are using [[Property:P131]] "research projects that contributed to this data set" to link to these "FactGrid research statements" &mdash; in this case to:


Once you have transformed your data in a table format you can run a QuickStatement (left menue) "Version 1" input by filling big blocks of columns into the input field. Press "Version 1" input. As far your data are machine readable you will get a preview of the upcoming input. Look into it to see whether there are "unknown" fields. These will create error message in the input.
[[Item:Q11305|Item:Q11305]]: "Hermann Schüttler / Reinhard Markner, research on the correspondence of the Illuminati order (1998-2007)."


You can also transform your input lines into comma-separated-values, csv data. The csv input is faster but it is also tricky as soon as you have double quotes " within text passages.
The data set for this item is, as you can see, complex: It names the two authors, their project supervisor, the funding institution and articles and books published in the course of the project.


The following links give detailed help:
It is now possible to run a database query that will list all the data records to which the project has contributed &mdash; useful if you want to present this work to a funding institution or if you wonder how to quote the data set properly.
 
* [https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Help:QuickStatements Wikidata QuickStatements help]. This page give the exact input commands for Quickstatements
* [http://openrefine.org/ http://openrefine.org/] Former Google refine, tool to transform information for a data input (does not yet run on FactGrid.


It is common practice on FactGrid that numerous projects contribute to a specific Item; simply add your "FactGrid Research Item" if you have added to a data set and want this to be known.
== How to claim personal responsibility on a specific statement ==
You can make controversial statements on FactGrid and link your views to these statements without having published anything anywhere else on the specific question.
To do so use [[Property:P196]] "reasoning" in the Reference section to link to an Item you create for the specific statement which you want to personally authorise.
You create this statement using [[Special:NewItem]] and give it a succinct title in which you will function as the author as in:
[[Item:Q24|Item:Q24]] Your Name, "The correct birth date of Geoffrey Chaucer" (FactGrid, 2020-04-06).
Having created the Item you substantiate it with the following statements:
* [[Property:P2]] "is a" " Item: Q22848 "FactGrid Thesis"
* [[Property:P21]] "author" &mdash; link here to the personal data record (or records if you are publishing this as a team) on FactGrid.
* [[Property:P106]] "date" &mdash; note here the current date with which you are creating the item.
* [[Property:P99]] "Thesis" &mdash; give here a short version of the thesis.
Once this is done, you can use the discussion page of the Ttem which you have just created to go into details. The page should give you space to explain your thesis in detail. You should in addition open a "discussion" section that can be used by others to share their views on the subject matter.


[[Category:Help Page]]
[[Category:Help Page]]

Latest revision as of 15:27, 6 April 2020

back

FactGrid has been created with the specific aim to function as a research database between the Gemwan National Library's GND and Wikidata. We do explicitly encourage projects of "original research" on FactGrid and we do not impose any "criteria of notability" on our participants. Data you publish with us can be presented with original document references, i.e. without references to published articles, we actually prefer the original document reference; and if a research project should want the database to keep track on infant mortality we would not object the creation of thousands of items on children who all died before adulthood — no matter how much detail you can give to the entries.

In FactGrid, relevance means relevance in the specific research project that collects these data. It is at the same moment important that individual research projects act with the required transparency. Neighbouring projects should know why we are collecting and presenting these data. Researchers should stand with their names for the potentially weird astonishing collections of data.

Make your own research project visible in the FactGrid project area

The project area has its link in the left hand menu:

If you are running a bigger project on FactGrid, a project with more than one or two hundred Database Items organised around a specific question you should briefly advertise your project in the section so that other participants can understand what is going on. We will eventually add a menue on this area, but the present number of projects can still be handled on a single page.

Run your own project pages in the FactGrid project namespace

You are free to run your own project pages in the "project name space" on FactGrid. All these pages should have "FactGrid:" as the initialising string sequence in their page titles. The common header is needed to run specific searches on FactGrid that can separate project pages from Item pages for instance if that is of interest in a specific database search.

The "Gotha Illuminati Research Base" provides examples how a project can use the namespace to present sample searches, pages on the participants or on specific projects within the bigger scope.

Link your own "FactGrid Research Item" of your project to data objects

Wikibase instances are designed to meticulously keep track on all the edits made on the installation. All Items, Properties and text pages come with version histories (see the tab above) that that list the entire respective editing process chronologically with the names of the accounts — an important feature that allows you to say precisely when you published a specific statement on an object, but insufficient, when it comes to presenting your work in a publication or a report that addresses the funding institution.

We are therefore encouraging the creation of specific "FactGrid research statements" Item:Q11295 which participants can now use to present on database objects such as Item:Q2080 Letter Ernst II. Ludwig von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg to Johann Joachim Christoph Bode, Gotha, 1783-07-18" We are using Property:P131 "research projects that contributed to this data set" to link to these "FactGrid research statements" — in this case to:

Item:Q11305: "Hermann Schüttler / Reinhard Markner, research on the correspondence of the Illuminati order (1998-2007)."

The data set for this item is, as you can see, complex: It names the two authors, their project supervisor, the funding institution and articles and books published in the course of the project.

It is now possible to run a database query that will list all the data records to which the project has contributed — useful if you want to present this work to a funding institution or if you wonder how to quote the data set properly.

It is common practice on FactGrid that numerous projects contribute to a specific Item; simply add your "FactGrid Research Item" if you have added to a data set and want this to be known.

How to claim personal responsibility on a specific statement

You can make controversial statements on FactGrid and link your views to these statements without having published anything anywhere else on the specific question.

To do so use Property:P196 "reasoning" in the Reference section to link to an Item you create for the specific statement which you want to personally authorise.

You create this statement using Special:NewItem and give it a succinct title in which you will function as the author as in:

Item:Q24 Your Name, "The correct birth date of Geoffrey Chaucer" (FactGrid, 2020-04-06).

Having created the Item you substantiate it with the following statements:

  • Property:P2 "is a" " Item: Q22848 "FactGrid Thesis"
  • Property:P21 "author" — link here to the personal data record (or records if you are publishing this as a team) on FactGrid.
  • Property:P106 "date" — note here the current date with which you are creating the item.
  • Property:P99 "Thesis" — give here a short version of the thesis.

Once this is done, you can use the discussion page of the Ttem which you have just created to go into details. The page should give you space to explain your thesis in detail. You should in addition open a "discussion" section that can be used by others to share their views on the subject matter.