Hi Dario and All, 

Thanks, and per your "My thoughts on why we need a class to describe “(bibliographic) item collections” in @wikidata and @wikicite. Feedback welcome" - https://twitter.com/ReaderMeter/status/934204071870742528 (see reply here - https://twitter.com/WorldUnivAndSch/status/934570933372588032 ) - I wonder how to add a further "virtual place-based" component to this - beyond Wikidata geo-coordinates - since such collections (e.g. in all 8,444 entries in languages per Glottolog eventually, and over all history and pre-history) may become so numerous with time - given Wikimedia's mission of all knowledge - such that organizing such (bibliographic) items in collections within a realistic virtual earth (think Google Streetview/Maps/Earth with TIME SLIDER and group build-able like Minecraft) - e.g. for where an artist made such art works in the 1600s, or for museums that have numerous items of such a collection now, but didn't 100 years' ago ... and even eventually with avatar bots painting these again - may have much merit. (Wiki CC MIT OCW-centric World Univ & Sch is planning ALL Libraries and ALL Museums in each of all 8,444 languages in such a realistic virtual earth with TIME SLIDER).

Thanks, 
Scott
Harbin Hot Springs’ Actual/Virtual Ethnography
http://bit.ly/HarbinBook
https://twitter.com/HarbinBook





On Fri, Nov 24, 2017 at 3:30 PM, Dario Taraborelli <dtaraborelli@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Hey all,

I'd like to hear from you on a proposal to add some order and structure to the various bibliographic corpora we currently have in Wikidata.

As you may know, coverage of creative works in Wikidata has seen significant growth over the last year. [1][2] Different groups and projects have started importing source metadata for various reasons: 
  • to provide sources machine-extracted statements (WikiFactMine [3], StrepHit [4])
  • to represent sources cited in Wikipedia (e.g. DOIs and PMIDs imported via the mwcite identifier dumps) or other Wikimedia projects (Wikisource, Wikispecies, Wikinews)
  • to create collections of the open access literature citable and reusable in Wikimedia projects (e.g. open access PMC review articles)
  • to maintain small, curated corpora about specific topics (e.g. the Zika corpus [5])
While all these efforts have grown organically and with little coordination, it's hard to keep track of who initiated the, to clearly communicate their purpose, to understand their completion criteria and their data quality needs, and last but not least to offer any contribution opportunities (in terms of code, or manual labor) to other community members. It's unclear if the future of these efforts should continue to be within Wikidata, or leverage the power of federated Wikibase-powered wikis (see our discussion at the end of the WikiCite session at WikidataCon [6]). Irrespective of the best long term solution, we need to provide some better structure to these efforts today if we want to address the above problems. 

I'd like to propose a fairly simple solution and hear your feedback on whether it makes sense to implement it as is or with some modifications.
  1. create a Wikidata class called "Wikidata item collection" [Q-X]
  2. create and document individual collections (e.g. the Wikidata Zika corpus [Q-Y]) as instances of this class: [Q-Y] --P31--> [Q-X] 
  3. add appropriate metadata to describe such collections (its main topic(s), creators, any external identifiers, if applicable) 
  4. mark individual bibliographic items as part of [P361] the corresponding collections
Note that this approach can apply to bibliographic item collections but also to any other set of items not directly identifiable via Wikidata properties. Of course, the same items could obviously be part of multiple collections. Some criteria would be needed to determine an appropriate threshold for legitimate collections (we wouldn't want arbitrary collections to be created for sets of items generated as part of a test import).

Beyond solving the issues listed above, this approach would also allow us to generate dedicated statistics on the growth or data quality of each collection via the SPARQL endpoint. It would also allow us to design constraints for arbitrary  item collections, something that right now is not possible (unless these sets can already be identified via a query).

If something similar already exists in the context of structured data donations/imports for GLAM, I'd be most grateful for any pointers.

Dario
 

[1] http://wikicite.org/statistics.html
[2] https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5548591.v1
[3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/ContentMine/WikiFactMine
[4] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:IEG/StrepHit:_Wikidata_Statements_Validation_via_References/Renewal
[5] https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:WikiProject_Zika_Corpus
[6] https://mirror.netcologne.de/CCC/events/wikidatacon/2017/h264-hd/wikidatacon2017-10009-eng-WikiCite_Wikidata_as_a_structured_repository_of_bibliographic_data_hd.mp4

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