Extend "I don't think that there is ever a need for the system to try to
infer that Douglas Adams is a Science Fiction author." with "I don't think
that there is ever a need for the system to try to infer that Douglas Adams
is a Science Fiction author when creating text for the Wikipedia article
for Douglas Adams." There might obviously be other use cases where such a
capability is needed.
On Wed, Jul 15, 2020 at 9:45 PM Denny Vrandečić <dvrandecic(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
Oh, yes, I certainly want us to tackle calendars (and
quantities, for that
matter) in Wikidata. This is something I left in a state I wasn't perfectly
happy yet, and I would like to help improve that, and Wikilambda will offer
an option for that (by providing a library of functions to deal with
calendars and quantities, specifically).
Regarding the reasoning and inferences: I certainly expect and hope that
we will be implementing such rules as envisioned by Adam in Wikilambda, and
I equally expect that we won't use them much in Abstract Wikipedia for the
reasons Charles mentioned.
There's an additional reason I see that would make it less likely to use
this kind of inference in Abstract Wikipedia, which is that I pretty much
expect that we as contributors will have rather fine-grained control of
what is stated in the article. I.e. I don't think that there is ever a need
for the system to try to infer that Douglas Adams is a Science Fiction
author. The abstract article for Doulas Adams will likely start with a
sentence such as "Douglas Adams was an English author, screenwriter,
essayist, humorist, satirist and dramatist." Now, this is not a full list
of all the occupations of Douglas Adams - Wikidata also lists children's
writer and playwright, he also was an environmental conservationist, a
computer game author, and probably much more. Now, to choose the right
selection of occupations for this first sentence, and whether to
additionally infer science fiction author, and then also to order this list
- I think, that might be rather a challenge.
Instead I would think that the author creating this first sentence can
explicitly set and choose which occupations to list in which order, and
which to drop. The list may or may not vibe with what is stated in
Wikidata, and that's OK.
We will have the possibility to query Wikidata for certain things, and we
will have the ability to do inferences, but I expect these superpowers to
be used in very measured way, and mostly for the longer tail of content.
But all of these are editorial decisions.
On Wed, Jul 15, 2020 at 3:02 AM Charles Matthews via Abstract-Wikipedia <
abstract-wikipedia(a)lists.wikimedia.org> wrote:
On 15 July 2020 at 10:45 Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
The example about inferring that Douglas Adams [1] was a science fiction
writer from some of his works being science fiction may have muddied the
waters.
The example from the Wikidata reasoning project [2] may be more useful
for discussion. “The spouse (P26) of Douglas Adams (Q42) was Jane Belson
(Q14623681). Clearly, this means that, conversely, the spouse (P26) of Jane
Belson (Q14623681) was Douglas Adams (Q42). This is a simple example of a
case where one statement (about Jane Belson (Q14623681)) can be inferred
from another statement (about Douglas Adams (Q42)).”
Yes, inference from family relationships to others is not, in my view, a
concern under WP:SYNTH. Inferences in temporal logic likewise.
I have commented elsewhere (in tweets) on the ability of Wikidata to
formalise the quite complex way historians actually qualify dates. Correct
propagation of the temporal logic of scholarly sources into AW format might
be a good test case of some of these ideas.
Wikidata has not yet tackled the plethora of calendars currently in use;
so I would be interested to see if AW could contribute in this direction,
code-wise.
These are examples of areas that seem to me fruitful.
Charles
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