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Create a knowledge map by cataloguing your visualizations, essays, media, and so on using terms you create. See the Knowledge Maps glossary definition for more information.

Knowledge Maps are a powerful new SHANTI technology for creating  annotated, multilingual, and SHANTI developed Knowledge Maps to help you make annotated, hierarchical "maps" of areas of subjects of  knowledge. For example, if you want to document literary genres, or  ritual traditions, or some other area of knowledge in a given culture, community, or time period, you can create a hierarchical representation  of the relevant categories and subcategories down to as deep a level as  you want. Each category can be represented in multiple linguistic  forms, and can be described and analyzed with multiple essays, each  titled and attributed to their their author. In addition to their  utility as valuable reference resources in their own right, these "maps"  can also be incorporated into indexing other resources, so that you can  describe images, videos, texts, places, or more using these maps, with the category as occurring in those contexts hyperlinked at all points to  its entry in the relevant knowledge map, where you can also see all  other resources linked to that category. All work and display is done online, and you can get up and going in ten minutes.

If you are creating a project that matches any of the following primary use cases, Knowledge Maps might be right for you:

A knowledge map is a hierarchical tree of labels, or terms.

You can contribute to existing terms or make your own. Currently, there are two types of Knowledge Maps: subjects and places. Each subject or place includes: 

  • one or more descriptions of the term
  • resources across projects with the same label

To make a knowledge map, you first create a term in Subjects or Places. Then you label media from any of the Mandala tools with this term. You can represent terms in multiple languages, and each term can include descriptions with different authors. 

In brief, Knowledge Maps lets you:

  • represent You want to represent and describe systematically an area of knowledge using a tree of categories and subcategories
  • You want to index resources - images, audio-video, texts, etc. - according to multi-level a hierarchy of controlled vocabulary, and also annotate the hierarchy itself

...

  • then annotate that hierarchy

Example

Here's the Bhutan Cultural Library term from Subjects. 

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As you can see, the Knowledge Maps includes a description of the item alongside several thousand linked texts, images, sound and video. Clicking each link on the sidebar will show you a gallery of resources tagged with "Bhutan Cultural Library." 

 

Related step-by-step guides: