Linking ACMI to Wikidata

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| author = James Gaunt
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ACMI is Australia's national museum of screen culture with over 200,000 items in their collection including film, ephemera, objects, and videogames.
ACMI is Australia's national museum of screen culture with over 200,000 items in their collection including film, ephemera, objects, and videogames.


Every item in their collection has a ACMI Identifier and unique URL that can be used in Wikidata to link back to ACMI's website.  
Every item in their collection has an ACMI Identifier and unique URL that can be used in Wikidata to link back to ACMI's website.  


Wikidata is a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by both humans and machines. Its open data can be used by anyone under the CC0 public domain license, so ACMI can add to and take information from Wikidata to improve both catalogues.
Wikidata is a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by both humans and machines. Its open data can be used by anyone under the CC0 public domain license, so ACMI can add to and take information from Wikidata to improve both datasets.
 
For example, the Kylie Minogue documentary White Diamond appears in ACMI's catalogue [https://www.acmi.net.au/works/122008--kylie-minogue-white-diamond/ here]. It also [[d:Q2733930|appears in Wikidata]] and a link to ACMI's catalogue item has been included under the list of Identifiers that link to several catalogues holding this documentary.
 
The Wikidata page also includes other information about this documentary such as cast, language, and distribution format that ACMI could pull from Wikidata to include in their own catalogue or website.


As part of this residency project, ACMI hired Paul Duchesne to explore ways this can be achieved.
As part of this residency project, ACMI hired Paul Duchesne to explore ways this can be achieved.
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He began by taking all of the ACMI Identifiers for creators listed in ACMI's catalogue and trying to find their match in Wikidata.
He began by taking all of the ACMI Identifiers for creators listed in ACMI's catalogue and trying to find their match in Wikidata.


This was done by [https://github.com/paulduchesne/filmography-matching matching filmographies], and was fairly easy to find matches for well known creators or those with large filmographies, but ACMI also includes student films in their collection that aren't likely to be matched.
This was done by [https://github.com/paulduchesne/filmography-matching matching filmographies], and was fairly easy to find matches for well known creators or those with large filmographies.
 
So far over 10,000 new items have been added to Wikidata that all link back to ACMI's catalogue. The next step is to ????
 
can be found on the ACMI website, where their


Paul Duchesne has previously published work on using Wikidata with film archives
But ACMI also includes smaller films in their collection that might not appear anywhere else, so these can be added to Wikidata as new items, and so far over 12,000 new items have been added to Wikidata that all link back to ACMI's catalogue.


https://github.com/paulduchesne/filmography-matching
Paul has previously published work on using Wikidata with film archives. In the paper ''[https://www.fiafnet.org/pages/E-Resources/Cataloguing-Practices-Linked-Open-Data.html Cataloguing Practices in the Age of Linked Open Data: Wikidata and Wikibase for Film Archives]'' he and Adelheid Heftberger shared how film archives could use Wikidata to pull filmographic information from Wikidata and publishing their datasets on Wikidata themselves.


https://github.com/ACMILabs
For his work at ACMI, Paul has shared Notebooks on Github on [https://github.com/paulduchesne/acmi-notebooks integration between ACMI and Wiki resources].


https://github.com/ACMILabs/acmi-wikidata-bot
Once the project is complete, Paul will publish further documentation on his work, and more information about the residency will be shared soon on the [https://labs.acmi.net.au/ ACMI Labs blog].


==External links==
==External links==
*[https://www.acmi.net.au/ ACMI website]
*[https://www.acmi.net.au/ ACMI website]
*[https://labs.acmi.net.au/ ACMI Labs blog post about Wikidata project] (note hasn't been published yet)
*[https://labs.acmi.net.au/ ACMI Labs blog]
*[https://github.com/paulduchesne/acmi-wikidata ACMI Wikidata project Github]
*[https://github.com/paulduchesne/acmi-wikidata ACMI Wikidata project Github]
*[https://github.com/paulduchesne/acmi-notebooks ACMI Residency notebooks on Github]
*[https://github.com/paulduchesne/acmi-notebooks ACMI Residency notebooks on Github]
*[https://github.com/ACMILabs/acmi-wikidata-bot ACMI Labs Wikidata bot on Github]
*[https://outreachdashboard.wmflabs.org/courses/ACMI/ACMI_x_Wikidata ACMI Residency Project Dashboard]
*[https://outreachdashboard.wmflabs.org/courses/ACMI/ACMI_x_Wikidata ACMI Residency Project Dashboard]
*''[https://www.fiafnet.org/pages/E-Resources/Cataloguing-Practices-Linked-Open-Data.html Cataloguing Practices in the Age of Linked Open Data : Wikidata and Wikibase for Film Archives]'', Adelheid Heftberger and Paul Duchesne (2020)
*''[https://www.fiafnet.org/pages/E-Resources/Cataloguing-Practices-Linked-Open-Data.html Cataloguing Practices in the Age of Linked Open Data: Wikidata and Wikibase for Film Archives]'', Adelheid Heftberger and Paul Duchesne (2020)
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Revision as of 06:05, 24 August 2023

Part of our Partner Projects
, James Gaunt.

As part of Wikimedia Australia’s Partner Projects, ACMI has hosted Paul Duchesne as their Wikimedian in Residence to link ACMI's catalogue items to Wikidata.

ACMI is Australia's national museum of screen culture with over 200,000 items in their collection including film, ephemera, objects, and videogames.

Every item in their collection has an ACMI Identifier and unique URL that can be used in Wikidata to link back to ACMI's website.

Wikidata is a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by both humans and machines. Its open data can be used by anyone under the CC0 public domain license, so ACMI can add to and take information from Wikidata to improve both datasets.

As part of this residency project, ACMI hired Paul Duchesne to explore ways this can be achieved.

He began by taking all of the ACMI Identifiers for creators listed in ACMI's catalogue and trying to find their match in Wikidata.

This was done by matching filmographies, and was fairly easy to find matches for well known creators or those with large filmographies.

But ACMI also includes smaller films in their collection that might not appear anywhere else, so these can be added to Wikidata as new items, and so far over 12,000 new items have been added to Wikidata that all link back to ACMI's catalogue.

Paul has previously published work on using Wikidata with film archives. In the paper Cataloguing Practices in the Age of Linked Open Data: Wikidata and Wikibase for Film Archives he and Adelheid Heftberger shared how film archives could use Wikidata to pull filmographic information from Wikidata and publishing their datasets on Wikidata themselves.

For his work at ACMI, Paul has shared Notebooks on Github on integration between ACMI and Wiki resources.

Once the project is complete, Paul will publish further documentation on his work, and more information about the residency will be shared soon on the ACMI Labs blog.

External links

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