5. Fast Intuitive Fit for use What is a Scratchpad? A website for you & your community Your data 1 “ Published” & reviewed on your site 3 Uploaded & tagged 2
49. Scratchpad Training http://emt[X].taxon.name Username: username Password: password Sites will be available for 2 weeks Scratchpad Log-in http://e-monocot.org/training Scratchpad Training Files
Editor's Notes
Before I do this let me say a few words about the case for the Scratchpads: Why do we need them. - Taxonomy / biodiversity studies have lots of big questions which require large aggregations of data to address. Issue like climate change, changing patterns of land use, protection of food supplies, ecosystem services etc.
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Get a template empty site that they can populate and add new users. The Scratchpads have been built to support a wide range of activities required by taxonomists. These functions are easy to navigate, helping people to construct their sites quickly and easily. Crucially users and theme and focus their site on one or more of a thange of activities. This is crucial to building a sense of community amongst the userbase.
The project has been running since March 2007 and in that time we have built up…These form an ecosystem of different communities working toward their own goals in a self managed environment. A high proportion of the sites fail - Probably about 80% have relativly little content. The system is construicted to accomdate failure.
Some use cases for the Scratchpads are illustrated on this rather elaborate slide here….
From a technical perspective Scratchpad sit on a single Virtual Machine in the NHM server room. Currently they occypy about 100 GB of space. The server architecture is based on a LAMP configuration. Its all backed up using Tivoli storage manager. Eventually these go to tape as part of the NHM’s storage management and are picked up by a courrier and stored off site. The marginal costs of creating a new site are exceptionally low - probably about £3 per site, taking into account storage and staff time.
Developers site with instructions on how to set up your own Scratchpad server. You can also access individual modules from here. Functionality is partitions into modules of code which with with the Drupal core. Moduels that are not
Scratchpads are build on three main parts, taxonomy, content types, and views. You can add data of various types to a Scratchpad. For example you can add images, bibliographic citations, or simple pages. Each image, bibliographic citation or page represents one so called node on a scratchpad. And each node has a unique URL. The taxonomy is the backbone of the Scratchpad, which gathers the data together. You can have several taxonomy vocabularies on your Scratchpad. On taxonomic websites, the main vocabulary is usually a biological classification, but it can also be a list of collectors or geographic regions for example. Each node is tagged, that is linked to one or more terms in the classification. Now we can view the data in various ways. One way is to look at just one node, this is the node view. Another way it to look at all the data on the Scratchpad linked to one vocabulary term and this is the taxon page view. You can also create your own views to look at only those data you want to see.
As an example of a Scratchpad focussed on a taxonomic group, I will give you an overview of my Milichiidae website. I have some general information on the family, mostly as simple pages, like the front page or as tables. Then I have some special information on the genus Milichiella, which I recently revised.
This includes species pages, which I will show later, an interactive Lucid key, a page where one can compare images of different species side by side, and a phylogenetic tree. As you can see at the bottom, other users, even anonymous users, which are not logged in, can comment on a page if this function has been enabled. However, comments are usually not published immediately, but have to be activated by the administrator of the site, to avoid spam.
Each Scratchpad has a ‘Content’ menu, which has links to the various content types present on the respective Scratchpad, the default ones as well as those custom-made for this Scratchpad. The default ones are for example biblio, countries map, … Clicking on ‘Image’, for example, will bring up the image gallery page.
This is a list of the image galleries I have on my Scratchpad. Clicking on the ‘Behaviour’ gallery will bring up a list of thumbnails for the images in this gallery and clicking on one of the images will open a kind of slide show.
This is a myrmecophilous milichiid stalking Crematogaster ants. I can just click on the arrow to see the next image.
or click on another link to see the image node with all the details.
Image details with copyright information and the tags associated with this node, like the gallery it belongs to, keywords and the classification. Clicking on a classification tag will always bring up the taxon page for this taxon, in this case Milichia patrizii.
A species page is build from all the data on a Scratchpad that are tagged with the respective classification term. Each content type is represented by one or more what we call panels or widgets. In the present case I have a panel for ‘Nomenclature & Description’ which is a content type I created myself. There is the default image panel, a specimen map and a list of the specimens the map is based on. There is a panel for ‘Page’ nodes and one for the bibliography. There are also several panels showing data from other web sources, like BHL, which you see here, but also Yahoo and Flickr images, GBIF, Gen- and Morphbank, Wikipedia and Google Scholar. This is a rare species, so except for BHL none of these sources has data on Milichia patrizii. The ‘Links’ panel is one I created myself to provide links to other useful information on the web that is not covered by the other web panels. At the bottom you have a special panel which is called Authors & Sources and shows a list of the contributors to this page, in this case me and BHL. Clicking on the citation button will generate a permanent copy of the species page as it is now, together with the citation and a link to the page. You can use this citation when you want to refer to this page in a paper.
[Skip?] I only want to show two more of the options you have on a Scratchpad. One is the glossary function. You can add a glossary which is basically the same as a classification with terms and definitions of the term. You can also define extra fields, like my ‘Explanation’ and ‘Character evolution’. When one of the glossary terms occurs on a page it is highlighted and hovering with the mouse over the term will show the definition.
[Skip?] The other content type, which we have recently improved a lot, is the character project. This is a character matrix, where you can enter controlled, text or numeric characters. The matrix can be exported to SDD format, which can be imported into Lucid. Lucid will generate the key, which you can then show on your Scratchpad. Same for phylogenies, you can export the matrix to Nexus format, generate a phylogenetic tree with the respective software, and then show this key on your Scratchpad. [don’t skip] We now also have the option to publish Scratchpad data in a journal, but this will be the topic of Vlad’s talk, later.