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Content created in different Mandala tools can use the same Knowledge Map: this joins content across tools. 

Summary


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Knowledge Maps are: 

  •  subject and place controlled vocabularies…
  •  …represented in ontologies… 
  •  ...with their own independent structured data (names, descriptions, illustrations, maps, and more)…
  •  ...that index content across Mandala, and
  •  …that connect: 
    •   content from one Mandala tool with content from another tool; and 
    •   a Mandala asset with information about a keyword; and
    •   a term with related Knowledge Map keywords. 


 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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KMaps for General Users

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KMaps fo Editors

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Types of Knowledge Maps 

Places are for geographical features of all types, i.e. locations. They include descriptions, alternate names, maps, feature types, relationships between places, relationships between places and other Knowledge Maps, ids, altitudes, and more.

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Think about Terms as dictionaries of terms, and Subjects as ontologies of subjects. The table below can help you understand how to think of each tool.

 

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Terms

Subjects

Names and descriptions

Naming and describing play a primary role. You can add nuance to the descriptions: examples, pronunciations, dictionaries from different sources, and more.

Naming and describing play a minor role. You can add a simple description and alternate names, but no advanced features exist.

Hierarchies

Hierarchies (also known as trees or ontologies) play a very minor role. While very simple hierarchical structures are possible, you can't create very sophisticated relationships between terms.

In subjects, ontologies play a primary role. You can create complex relationships between subjects.

 


Video Overview

If you want to learn about Knowledge Maps in-depth, we've put together a mini three-part course. You can watch it below or in this Mandala Audio-Video collection.