About
Background reading
- Scholia and scientometrics with Wikidata.
- So what can we use Wikicite for?
- The Wikidata scholarly profile page
- WikiCite 2016 Report
- Robustifying Scholia: paving the way for knowledge discovery and research assessment through Wikidata
FAQ
- See the dedicated page.
Presentations
- Scholia. 35 minute presentation including discussion at WikidataCon 2017, Berlin, Germany.
- Describing software so we can cite software. 11 minute part of presentation and discussion at WikidataCon 2017, Berlin, Germany.
Acknowledgment
- Scholia has received funding from:
- the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation under grant number G-2019-11458
- Wikicite.
- Lambert Heller. Inspiration from What will the scholarly profile page of the future look like? Provision of metadata is enabling experimentation.
- Egon Willighagen, ORCID idea.
- Magnus Manske.
- Jakob Voß.
- Shubhanshu Mishra, inspiration for author profile visualization with LEGOLAS, see, e.g., the example for Neil Smalheiser.
Technical acknowledgement
- Flask, python web framework (BSD license).
- Bootstrap, front-end framework (MIT license).
- jQuery, Javascript library (jQuery license, typically MIT license).
- DataTables, table-rendering Javascript library (MIT license).
- Citation.js, see this PeerJ Computer Science paper
Brand acknowledgement
- TWITTER and the Twitter Bird logo are trademarks of Twitter Inc. or its affiliates
- GITHUB® is an exclusive trademark registered in the United States by GitHub, Inc.
- The ROR logo by the Research Organization Registry is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Citation
@InProceedings{NielsenF2017Scholia, author = {Finn {\AA}rup Nielsen and Daniel Mietchen and Egon Willighagen}, title = {Scholia and scientometrics with Wikidata}, booktitle = {Scientometrics 2017}, year = {2017}, arxiv = {1703.04222}, wikidata = {Q28942417}, pages = {237--259}, month = {November}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-70407-4_36}, URL = {https://arxiv.org/pdf/1703.04222}, }