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Subjects and Places let you categorize content in Mandala using special labels called Knowledge Maps.

Knowledge Maps, or KMaps, can be crudely described as "labels in a hierarchyhierarchal tree format." If you're familiar with the concept of ontologiescontrolled vocabularies, or semantic fields, then KMaps won't be new to you. However, each Knowledge Map also has its own metadata (alternate names, descriptions, and more), Knowledge Maps also include information about a term, like alternate names, illustrations, GIS locations, and more. You can make and use these sophisticated labels without any programming knowledge.  visible through the Subjects and Places viewer. A KMap's metadata, along with its position relative to other Knowledge Maps in the hierarchy, provides context about a term. Content created in different Mandala tools can use the same Knowledge Map: this joins content across tools. 

To summarize, Knowledge Maps are: 

  •  subject and place labels…
  •  …organized in a hierarchal tree format… 
  •  ...with their own data (alternate names, descriptions, illustrations, maps, and more)…. 
  •  …that connect: 
    •   content from one Mandala tool with content from another tool; and 
    •   a Mandala asset with information about a term; and
    •   a term with related Knowledge Map terms. 

Knowledge Map collaborators can either be general users or editors. These different types of collaborators work on different websites, though the information is shared between sites. Anyone with a UVa NetBadge account can be a general user, but the Knowledge Maps team needs to give you special privileges if you want to be an editor. 

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