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Unfolding History: Difference between revisions

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*[http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-36844-8_10#page-1 Network approach to history] -- by [[Giuliano_Andrea_Pagani|Andrea]].  
*[http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-36844-8_10#page-1 Network approach to history] -- by [[Giuliano_Andrea_Pagani|Andrea]].  
*A nice work on [http://www.merl.com/papers/docs/TR99-16.pdf Unfolding Narrative] -- by [[Carol_Strohecker Carol Strohecker]].
*A nice work on [http://www.merl.com/papers/docs/TR99-16.pdf Unfolding Narrative] -- by [[Carol_Strohecker Carol Strohecker]].
* Brian Keegan wrote [http://www.brianckeegan.com/dissertation/ his dissertation] on something pretty similar, and has done some other work on Wikipedia edits of current events. --David


Surely more people has approached the problem of History formation from a Complex Systems approach. It would be interesting to go over the literature and maybe find some insight. Someone would like to do that?
Surely more people has approached the problem of History formation from a Complex Systems approach. It would be interesting to go over the literature and maybe find some insight. Someone would like to do that?

Revision as of 17:39, 12 June 2013

Trying to give new impulse to this project: let us use this site to share info and tools!


Brainstorming

Some of the ideas that have been buzzing around:

  • Make an agent based model.
  • Take empirical data from the wikipedia.
  • Agents biasing History.
    • Do conflicts in a country reflect on their account of History?
  • External vs. internal history: the cost of inner encoding vs. relying on the environment to encode important traits.

Please, post those missing!!


Scripts

It is very easy and fast to parse files with python. This links to a dropbox folder containing a few sample data manually cropped from the wikipedia and three python scripts to parse the data.



Tools

The wikipedia has got a large collection of tools to extract statistics from the site. After a loose search, nothing was found that resembles what I (Luíño) had in mind. There are very interesting models and fits to data, though, of how an article grows in time or how much this or that user affects a wiki. If we wanted to do something with the wikipedia eventually, we should check out that what we need is has not already been invented. Someone up to navigate through these tools and tells us about them?


Literature

The following more or less related papers have been posted to the project by different colleagues:

Surely more people has approached the problem of History formation from a Complex Systems approach. It would be interesting to go over the literature and maybe find some insight. Someone would like to do that?