Hello Antoine,
just to add to what was already said:
a Qualifier in Wikidata is not a "statement about a statement". In RDF
semantics, the pattern that we follow is not the reification of the triple
and then to make triples with the reified triple as a subject, as per <
http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-mt/#ReifAndCont> but rather the pattern of n-ary
relations per <http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-n-aryRelations/> . The use cases
very beautifully visualize how Wikidata maps to RDF: <
http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-n-aryRelations/#useCase1>
This is also what Wikidata's mapping to RDF document explains and
motivates: <https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Development/RDF>
I hope this helps,
Denny
On Oct 31, 2013 3:40 AM, "Antoine Zimmermann"
<antoine.zimmermann(a)emse.fr>
wrote:
Hello,
I have a few questions about how statement qualifiers should be used.
First, my understanding of qualifiers is that they define statements about
statements. So, if I have the statement:
Q17(Japan) P6(head of government) Q132345(Shinzō Abe)
with the qualifier:
P39(office held) Q274948(Prime Minister of Japan)
it means that the statement holds an office, right?
It seems to me that this is incorrect and that this qualifier should in
fact be a statement about Shinzō Abe. Can you confirm this?
Second, concerning temporal qualifiers: what does it mean that the "start"
or "end" is "no value"? I can imagine two interpretations:
1. the statement is true forever (a person is a dead person from the
moment of their death till the end of the universe)
2. (for end date) the statement is still true, we cannot predict when
it's going to end.
For me, case number 2 should rather be marked as "unknown value" rather
than "no value". But again, what does "unknown value" means in
comparison
to having no indicated value?
Third, what if a statement is temporarily true (say, X held office from T1
to T2) then becomes false and become true again (like X held same office
from T3 to T4 with T3 > T2)? The situation exists for Q35171(Grover
Cleveland) who has the following statement:
Q35171 P39(position held) Q11696(President of the United States of
America)
with qualifiers, and a second occurrence of the same statement with
different qualifiers. The wikidata user interface makes it clear that there
are two occurrences of the statement with different qualifiers, but how
does the wikidata data model allows me to distinguish between these two
occurrences?
How do I know that:
P580(start date) "March 4 1885"
only applies to the first occurrence of the statement, while:
P580(start date) "March 4 1893"
only applies to the second occurrence of the statement?
I could have a heuristic that says if two "start date"s are given, then
assume that they are the starting points of two disjoint intervales. But
can I always guarantee this?
Best,
AZ
--
Antoine Zimmermann
ISCOD / LSTI - Institut Henri Fayol
École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Saint-Étienne
158 cours Fauriel
42023 Saint-Étienne Cedex 2
France
Tél:+33(0)4 77 42 66 03
Fax:+33(0)4 77 42 66 66
http://zimmer.aprilfoolsreview.com/
_______________________________________________
Wikidata-l mailing list
Wikidata-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l