Hello,
I just watched the showcase of December 2018, thank you for the interesting
contribution! It would be great it further research could have a look at
questions such as language choice.
With regard to have more insight in what readers want, I struggled in the
past with two questions:
Regionally important content: Should a Wikipedia language version
concentrate on regional topics, or try to cover a large variety of topics?
Heinz Kloss in the 1970s introduced the idea of "eigenbezogene Inhalte",
content, that is closely related to a language and its region, like local
history, culture and typical crafts such as fishing on the Faroe islands or
farming in the Alps. What do the readers in Hungary want? That hu.WP
concentrates on Hungarian topics, while they consult English wikipedia for
specialized technical topics or other countries?
Large or small articles: Some printed encyclopedias had relatively few, but
large articles. Others segmented the content into many small articles.
(Think of Encyclopedia Britannica: Macropedia and Micropedia.) What do
Wikipedia readers want? Do they prefer to read about a larger topic in one
long, well structured article? Or several short ones, linking to each other?
I could imagine that a reader who is interested in information for work or
school prefers long articles that provide an in-depth approach in order to
became familiar with the overall topic (that is, what one would expect
traditionally). And that "news" readers want to look up something quickly,
in a short, simplyfing article.
Kind regards
Ziko
Hello everyone,
I am writing to tell you that we have presented a plan for a second phase
to extend the project Wikipedia Cultural Diversity Observatory (WCDO).
As a reminder, the WCDO aims at providing valuable strategic data in order
to fight for more cultural diversity in each Wikipedia language edition. In
the previous phase, we collected the Cultural Context Content (CCC)
datasets for all 300 language editions and provided some top priority
articles for different topics such as women-men, geolocated, among others
(named Top CCC articles).
The infrastructure for the project has been set (datasets and website). In
this new phase
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/WCDO/Culture_Gap_Monthly_Mon…>,
we plan to create many more tools and visualizations: Top CCC article lists
based on community member suggestions, but most importantly, to create a
tool to monitor the gaps on a monthly basis and serve it as a newsletter.
This way editors will be able to see the efforts they dedicate each month
to create geolocated articles or cultural context content to bridge the
gaps.
Also, we plan to research on marginalized languages in order to see which
have more potential to become a new Wikipedia language edition, start
creating content about their cultural context ("decolonizing the
Internet"), and increase the overall cultural diversity of the project.
If you think you can join the project or provide some feedback, please
write us at tools.wcdo(a)tools.wmflabs.org. If you consider this may be
helpful, please help us, provide some feedback and endorse the project.
You can check the project here:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/WCDO/Culture_Gap_Monthly_Mon…
Thanks in advance for your time.
Best,
Marc Miquel
ᐧ
------
This summer the fifth edition of IC2S2 is hosted by the University of
Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Paper submission for this lustrum edition is
now open!
IC2S2 2019 – 5th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE
July 17-20, 2019
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Web: https://2019.ic2s2.org/
Twitter: @IC2S2 <https://twitter.com/IC2S2>/ #IC2S2
================================================
CONFIRMED KEYNOTE SPEAKERS (more to be announced)
Kenneth Benoit (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Jana Diesner (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign)
Deen Freelon (University of North Carolina)
Cesar Hidalgo (MIT Media Lab)
Mirta Galesic (Santa Fe Institute)
Devra Moehler (Facebook Research)
Scott Page (University of Michigan)
Emma Spiro (University of Washington)
Lukas Vermeer (Booking.com)
Claudia Wagner (GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)
=================================================
After successful editions in Helsinki, Evanston, and Cologne, the 5th
International Conference on Computational Social Science (IC2S2 2019)
will take place at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, July
17-20, 2019. Contributed abstracts can be presented orally in parallel
thematic sessions or as posters at the three day conference. In addition
to keynote speakers and paper sessions, the conference will also include
a series of training opportunities and tutorials. Please see the call
for tutorials below.
===================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS (ABSTRACTS)
===================================================
We welcome submissions on any topic in the field of
computational social science, including (a) work that advances
methods and approaches in computational social science, (b)
data-driven work that describes or explains social phenomena,
and (c) theoretical work that generates new insights into
computational social science research.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
*
Network analysis of social systems
*
Large-scale social experiments
*
Agent-based or other simulations of social phenomena
*
Text analysis and natural language processing (NLP) of social phenomena
*
Cultural patterns and dynamics
*
Computational science studies (sociology of science)
*
Social news curation and collaborative filtering
*
Social media studies
*
Theoretical discussions in computational social science
*
Causal inference and computational methods for social science
*
Ethics in computational social sciences
*
Reproducibility in computational social science
*
Large scale infrastructure in computational social science
*
Novel digital data sources
*
Computational analyses for addressing societal challenges
*
Methods and analyses of observational social data
*
Computational social science research in industry
The submission should include a title, a list of 5 keywords, and an
extended abstract (= main text of the submission) with at least one
figure, formatted as a PDF file. Please give a sufficiently detailed
description of your work and your methods so we can adequately assess
its relevance.
Each extended abstract will be reviewed by a Program Committee composed
of experts in computational social science. Contributions to the
conference should be submitted via EasyChair at the conference website
https://2019.ic2s2.org/call-for-papers/
<https://2019.ic2s2.org/call-for-papers/>
We will do our best to have mostly oral presentations of the selected
contributions, both plenary and in parallel sessions. However, since we
cannot estimate the number of submissions we may accept some abstracts
for a poster session. For additional information, see the conference
website which also includes the Extended Abstract Template (.docx and
LaTeX available).
The deadline for abstract submission is February 5, 2019.
===================================================
CALL FOR TUTORIALS
===================================================
On the pre-conference day (July 17, 2019), IC2S2 will host a day of
tutorials and skills workshops. They should give social science
researchers and data analyst enthusiasts the opportunity to add new
tools to their toolkit.
For this we are calling for proposals of tutorials that address methods,
skills and tools useful to conduct research in computational social
science, including but not limited to the following topics:
- data collection / text mining approaches for social scientists
- new advances in social network analysis
- text analysis
- visual communication and visualizations
- experimental designs in CSS
- using sensors for studying behavior
- combining digital trace data and additional data (e.g. surveys)
- assessing biases in data collection
- best practices for working with online communities (including
crowdsourcing)
- legal and ethical dimensions of CSS research
- reproducibility in CSS research
We welcome proposals for tutorials on topics at the intersection of the
social sciences, computer science and/or statistics. We will consider
any topic; provided that the proposal makes a strong argument that the
tutorial is important for the IC2S2 community. Tutorials should be
comprehensive and should not focus only on the presenter’s previous
work. We anticipate that each accepted tutorial will be 3 hours long.
However, we are also accepting half-tutorials (1.5 hours) and full-day
tutorials (6 hours).
-----------------------------
PROPOSAL FORMAT
-----------------------------
Proposals for tutorials should be no more than three pages in length and
should contain the following:
*
Title
*
Presenters / organizers: Please provide names, affiliations, email
addresses, and short bios (up to 200 words) for each presenter. Bios
should cover the presenters' expertise related to the topic of the
tutorial. If there are multiple presenters, please describe how the
time will be divided between them.
*
Topic: An abstract describing the topic (approx. 250 words)
*
Audience: A short statement about the expected target audience. What
prior knowledge, if any, do you expect from the audience?
*
Rationale: What is the objective / learning outcome of the tutorial?
What is the benefit for the attendees? Why is this tutorial
important for IC2S2 community?
*
Format: A description of the proposed event format and a list of
proposed activities
*
Equipment: A short note on equipment required for the tutorial
format (e.g. whiteboards).
*
Previous tutorials: Has the tutorial (or a similar/highly related
tutorial) been presented at another venue previously? If so, please
list the dates and venues, and describe the similarities and
differences between the previous tutorials and proposed tutorial.
*
Proposed length of the tutorial: please choose from 1.5 hours (half
session), 3 hours (full session), and 6 hours (full day). If you are
flexible, please indicate in the outline the content that will not
be included if a short/long version of the tutorial is given. If you
would like to give a 6 hour tutorial please justify why a full day
is necessary.
Organizers of accepted tutorials are expected to provide some
information material to announce the tutorial on the conference website
and to help spreading the word about the tutorial via mailing lists and
social media. Tutorial organizers will receive free admission to the
main conference.
Please submit your proposal as PDF file via email to ic2s2(a)uva.nl
<mailto:ic2s2@uva.nl>.
The deadline for tutorial proposals is January 24, 2019.
====================================================
IMPORTANT DATES
====================================================
*
January 24, 2019 – Tutorial proposal deadline
*
February 5, 2019 – Regular abstract submission deadline
*
March 6, 2019 – Acceptance notification
*
April 30, 2019 – Early bird registration deadline
*
June 30, 2019 – Registration deadline
*
July 17-20, 2019 – Conference
=====================================================
SPONSORSHIP
=====================================================
Do you want to affiliate your organisation to IC2S2? Bespoke sponsorship
packages are available on request. Contact the local chairs Eelke
Heemskerk and Frank Takes at ic2s2(a)uva.nl <mailto:ic2s2@uva.nl>
IC2S2 2019 is hosted by CORPNET <https://corpnet.uva.nl/>, University of
Amsterdam and sponsored by Microsoft, Statistics Netherlands, ODISSEI,
University of Amsterdam, Leiden University, Municipality of Amsterdam.
Please watch the video“IC2S2 comes to Amsterdam
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUWvAysyqPk&t=2s>/”/.
Web: https://2019.ic2s2.org/ Twitter: @IC2S2
<https://twitter.com/IC2S2>/ #IC2S2
Apologies for cross-posting
Invitation
====
SEMANTiCS 2019 - The Power of Artificial Intelligence and Knowledge
Graphs, September 9 - 12, 2019
15th International Conference on Semantic Systems
Karlsruhe, Germany
====
Important Dates (specific track dates are given below)
Abstract Submission Deadline: April 23, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Paper Submission Deadline: April 30, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Notification of Acceptance: June 17, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Camera-Ready Paper: July 29, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Find the detailed calls here: https://2019.semantics.cc/calls
Submission via Easychair on
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=semantics2019
Proceedings of SEMANTiCS19 will be published by Springer LNCS & CEUR.
====
SEMANTiCS 2019 particularly welcomes submissions on the following key
topics:
+ Web Semantics & Linked (Open) Data
+ Enterprise Knowledge Graphs, Graph Data Management and Deep Semantics
+ Machine Learning & Deep Learning Techniques
+ Semantic Information Management & Knowledge Integration
+ Terminology, Thesaurus & Ontology Management
+ Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
+ Reasoning, Rules and Policies
+ Natural Language Processing
+ Data Quality Management and Assurance
+ Explainable Artificial Intelligence
+ Semantics in Data Science
+ Semantics of Blockchain & Distributed Ledger Technologies
+ Trust, Data Privacy, and Security with Semantic Technologies
+ Economics of Data, Data Services and Data Ecosystems
----
+ Special Sub-Topic: Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage
+ Special Sub-Topic: LegalTech
We especially encourage contributions that illustrate the applicability
of the topics mentioned above for industrial purposes and/or illustrate
the business relevance of their contribution for specific industries.
We invite contributions to the following tracks:
====
Research and Innovation Track
The Research and Innovation track at SEMANTiCS welcomes papers on novel
scientific research and/or innovations relevant to the topics of the
conference. Submissions must be original and must not have been
submitted for publication elsewhere. Papers must follow the guidelines
given in the author instructions, including references and optional
appendices. Each submission will be reviewed by several PC members who
will judge it based on its innovativeness, appropriateness, and impact
of results in terms of effectiveness at solving real problems.
Important Dates:
Abstract Submission Deadline: April 23, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Paper Submission Deadline: April 30, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Notification of Acceptance: June 10, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Camera-Ready Paper: July 29, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Author instructions: Reviews will be carried out in a single-blind mode.
Long papers should have a maximum length of 15 pages and short papers of
6 pages. Submissions should follow the guidelines of the Springer LNCS
format.
====
Posters and Demos Track
The Posters and Demonstrations Track invites innovative work in
progress, late-breaking research and innovation results, and smaller
contributions in all fields related to the Semantic Web and Linked Data
in a broader sense. These include submissions on innovative applications
with impact on end users, such as demos of solutions that users may test
or that are yet in the conceptual phase but are worth discussing, and
also applications or pieces of code that may attract developers and
potential research or business partners.
Important Dates (Posters & Demos)
Paper Submission Deadline: June 10, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Notification of Acceptance: July 8, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Camera-Ready Paper: July 22, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Author instructions: Proceedings will be published via CEUR Workshop
proceedings and should follow the guidelines of the Springer LNCS format.
====
Industry and Use Case Track
Focusing strongly on industry needs and ground breaking technology
trends SEMANTICS invites presentations on enterprise solutions that deal
with semantic processing of data and/or information. A special focus of
Semantics 2019 will be on the convergence of machine learning techniques
and knowledge graphs. Additional topics of interest are Enterprise
Knowledge Graphs, Semantic AI & Machine Learning, Enterprise Data
Integration, Linked Data & Data Publishing, Semantic Search,
Recommendation Services, Thesaurus and/or Ontology Management, Text
Mining, Data Mining and any related fields. All submissions should have
a strong focus on real-world applications beyond the prototypical stage
and demonstrate the power of semantic systems!
Important Dates:
Proposal Deadline: May 27, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Notification of Acceptance: June 10, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
A detailed Call for Industry and Use Case Presentations will be
available soon.
====
Workshops and Tutorials
Workshops and Tutorials at SEMANTiCS 2018 allow your organisation or
project to advance and promote your topics and gain increased
visibility. The workshops and tutorials will provide a forum for
presenting widely recognised contributions and findings to a diverse and
knowledgeable community. Furthermore, the event can be used as a
dissemination activity in the scope of large research projects or as a
closed format for research and commercial project consortia meetings.
Important Dates for Workshops:
Workshop Proposals: March 4, 2019 (23:59 Hawaii Time)
Notification of Acceptance: March 18, 2019 (23:59 Hawaii Time)
Important Dates for Tutorials (and other meetings, e.g. seminars,
show-cases, etc., without call for papers):
Submission deadline: May 6, 2019 (23:59 Hawaii Time)
Notifications: May 13, 2019 (23:59 Hawaii Time)
====
Vocabulary Innovation Award #VIA
Bootstrap your vocabulary project: At the Vocabulary Innovation Award
you can present your ideas, early stage or camera-ready vocabularies in
order to showcase your work, find the right people and get the
discussion going. For this event, we provide both, an academic and
industry track. We use a broad definition of what a vocabulary is. For
instance, ontologies, classification schemes, thesauri, taxonomies,
subject heading and metadata schemes, whichever their format, be it RDF
or not, are all welcome. More details will follow.
Proposal Deadline: May 20, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
Notification of Acceptance: June 03, 2019 (11:59 pm, Hawaii time)
====
Semantics 2019 Organizing Committee
Research and Innovation Chairs:
+ Philippe Philippe Cudré-Mauroux, University of Fribourg
+ Maribel Acosta, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Industry and Use Case Presentation Chairs:
+ Andreas Blumauer, Semantic Web Company
+ Christian Dirschl, Wolters Kluwer
Workshops and Tutorials Chairs:
+ Anna Lisa Gentile, IBM Research
+ Irene Celino, Cefriel
Posters and Demos Chairs:
+ Mehwish Alam, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR)
+ Ricardo Usbeck, University of Paderborn
Vocabulary Innovation Award:
+ Alexandra Garatzogianni, L3S Research Center of the Leibniz University
of Hannover
+ Andreas Ledl, BARTOC.org & Basel University Library
Proceedings Chairs:
+ Maria Maleshkova, University of Bonn
+ Tassilo Pellegrini, UAS St. Pölten
Conference Chairs:
+ Harald Sack, FIZ Karlsruhe
+ York Sure Vetter, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
+ Tassilo Pellegrini, UAS St. Pölten
The program committee will be announced on the conference website
https://2019.semantics.cc/
Dear Wiki-researchers,
I have a huge favor to ask of everyone in this mailing list --
TLDR: *please fill out* *this questionnaire
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/%E2%80%8Bhttps://goo.gl/forms/WMFb6j2mpG2H…!!>!*
And now in more details:
As some of you may know, I'm a PhD candidate at the School of Education,
Tel Aviv University, and my research focuses on Wikidata as a learning
platform.
To succeed in my research, I need data about how users (such as
yourselves) interact
with Wikidata, so it would be of great help if you could take the time to
fill out the questionnaire linked above.
It's estimated that it should take between 15-30 minutes, depending on how
detailed your answers would be.
I'm striving for at least 100 replies, but this is one of those cases of
"the more, the merrier", so every person filling it out is of huge help.
Please feel free to ping me privately or send me an email if you have any
questions, or if you are willing to participate in a follow up
interview (there's
also an option to mark that in the questionnaire itself).
Thanks in advance for considering filling it out. I will be forever grateful
to anyone who can help and promise to update you on my progress. :)
Cheers,
Shani.
-----------------------------------------------
*Shani Evenstein Sigalov*
EdTech Innovation Strategist, NY/American Medical Program, Sackler School
of Medicine, Tel Aviv University.
PhD Candidate, School of Education, Tel Aviv University.
Lecturer, Tel Aviv University.
Chairperson, WikiProject Medicine Foundation
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wiki_Project_Med>.
Chairperson, Wikipedia & Education User Group
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_%26_Education_User_Group>.
Chairperson, The Hebrew Literature Digitization Society
<http://www.israelgives.org/amuta/580428621>.
Chief Editor, Project Ben-Yehuda <http://bybe.benyehuda.org>.
*+972-525640648*
Hello,
ORES has been out and served for the Wikipedia community for a while, for
the purpose such as counter-vandalism. Having seen the wide usage and
effectiveness of ORES in the community, we'd like to continue working on
ORES development. We plan to improve and redesign ORES algorithms by
incorporating feedbacks of all the stakeholders involved in the entire ORES
ecosystem, such as ORES application developers, ORES application operators,
etc. We want to understand their concerns and values, and come up with
effective algorithmic designs that can balance trade-offs and mitigate
potential conflicts of interests (such as edit quality control v.s.
newcomer protection) to further improve ORES performance.
We will work with Aaron Halfaker and his team to make improvements on ORES
quality control models, and identify its limitations. Here is the project
proposal on Meta-Wiki
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Applying_Value-Sensitive_Algorithm…>.
If you are interested or have any thoughts, please feel free to reach out
to me. Thanks!
Hello everyone,
The next Research Showcase, *Why the World Reads Wikipedia*, will be
live-streamed this Wednesday, December 12, 2018, at 11:30 AM PST/19:30 UTC.
This presentation is about Wikipedia usage across languages.
YouTube stream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKMFvi_CCB0
As usual, you can join the conversation on IRC at #wikimedia-research. You
can also watch our past research showcases here:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Research/Showcase
This month's presentation:
*Why the World Reads Wikipedia*
By Florian Lemmerich, RWTH Aachen University; Diego Sáez-Trumper, Wikimedia
Foundation; Robert West, EPFL; and Leila Zia, Wikimedia Foundation
So far, little is known about why users across the world read Wikipedia's
various language editions. To bridge this gap, we conducted a comparative
study by combining a large-scale survey of Wikipedia readers across 14
language editions with a log-based analysis of user activity. For analysis,
we proceeded in three steps: First, we analyzed the survey results to
compare the prevalence of Wikipedia use cases across languages, discovering
commonalities, but also substantial differences, among Wikipedia languages
with respect to their usage. Second, we matched survey responses to the
respondents' traces in Wikipedia's server logs to characterize behavioral
patterns associated with specific use cases, finding that distinctive
patterns consistently mark certain use cases across language editions.
Third, we could show that certain Wikipedia use cases are more common in
countries with certain socio-economic characteristics; e.g., in-depth
reading of Wikipedia articles is substantially more common in countries
with a low Human Development Index. The outcomes of this study provide a
deeper understanding of Wikipedia readership in a wide range of languages,
which is important for Wikipedia editors, developers, and the reusers of
Wikipedia content.
--
Janna Layton
Administrative Assistant - Audiences & Technology
Wikimedia Foundation
1 Montgomery St. Suite 1600
San Francisco, CA 94104
You are invited to WOW2019: The worlds of Wikimedia: communicating and collaborating across languages and cultures, at University of Sydney, 12-14 June 2019.
The United Nations declared 2019 as the International Year of Indigenous Languages<https://en.iyil2019.org/> to celebrate the world’s rich cultural diversity and heighten awareness of cultures at risk. As a free, multimedia publishing site, Wikipedia has unrealized potential for supporting such cultures in terms of languages, traditions and different knowledge systems. This conference invites participants to consider the breadth of human experience and wisdom, and how they can best be served by digital technologies and the Wikimedia movement. We welcome papers that address Wikimedia’s role in enhancing global diversity from a range of perspectives including education, digital communication, indigenous knowledge, GLAM, Disability Studies, Internet studies and Big Data, as a means to investigate new methods of collaboration to broaden inclusion across all levels of society.
Topics can refer to any of the various Wikimedia projects, as well as language and cultural diversity.
Please submit abstracts up to 250 words via EasyChair<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wow2019> by March 12. Acceptance of papers by March 20.
Website wow2019.net<http://wow2019.net/>
Dr Bunty Avieson | Lecturer
The University of Sydney
Department of Media and Communications, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Rm N225, John Woolley | The University of Sydney | NSW | 2006
+61 2 8627 0201
bunty.avieson(a)sydney.edu.au<mailto:bunty.avieson@sydney.edu.au> | sydney.edu.au<https://sydney.edu.au/arts/staff/profiles/bunty.avieson.php>
I acknowledge the Gadigal people of the Eora nation
as the traditional custodians of the land on which I live and work
CRICOS 00026A
This email plus any attachments to it are confidential. Any unauthorised use is strictly prohibited.
If you receive this email in error, please delete it and any attachments.
Please think of our environment and only print this email if necessary.
Dear list members,
I’m Gabriele Marinello, co-founder along with Giorgio Bedogni and Alberto Bedogni of Qeios, a new Open Access integrated system, created by researchers, for researchers.
Qeios is the first tool designed to improve the quality and comparability/reproducibility of the research by acting at the production level. A new piece of knowledge, the Definition, and the rating system built on it allow researchers to produce and publish research of increased quality and comparability/reproducibility.
If you are curious, you can find a video and more information here: https://www.qeios.com/about
If then you are interested, you can sign up using an invitation link, here is Giorgio’s: https://www.qeios.com/invitation-to-join/researcher/314
If you have any questions/doubts or feedback, feel free to drop me an email at gm(a)qeios.com or call me at +39 380 8912791.
Many thanks and all the best,
Gabriele
—
Gabriele Marinello
Co-founder, Qeios Ltd
34, Old Barrack Yard, SW1X 7NP, London, UKUK +44 (0) 7426 853828IT +39 380 8912791gm(a)qeios.comwww.qeios.com
Hi everyone,
As part of my research on governance mechanisms in Wikipedia, I'm looking
for data regarding mediation, arbitration, and polls.
Are records of mediation and arbitration committees (dates, the article,
decisions) and on voting readily available?
How could I gain access to this data?
I'm particularly interested on data regarding the Gdansk article (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gda%C5%84sk), but would be happy to retrieve
data for other articles as well.
Thanks in advance,
Ofer Arazy