Difference between revisions of "Sugar Labs/SOM"

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(Adding some gallery comments)
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<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Image:2008-July-05-11-som.jpg|2008 July 5th to 11th
+
Image:2008-July-05-11-som.jpg|'''2008 July 5th to 11th'''
Image:2008-June-28-July-4-som.jpg|2008 June 28th to July 4th
+
Image:2008-June-28-July-4-som.jpg|'''2008 June 28th to July 4th'''<br>Quiet again.
Image:2008-June-21-27-som.jpg|2008 June 21st to 27th
+
Image:2008-June-21-27-som.jpg|'''2008 June 21st to 27th'''<br>List activity picked up this week; the ongoing Smalltallk/Debian drama is featured.
Image:2008-June-14-20-som.jpg|2008 June 14th to 20th
+
Image:2008-June-14-20-som.jpg|'''2008 June 14th to 20th'''<br>A low traffic week.
Image:2008-June-07-13-som.jpg|2008 June 7th to 13th
+
Image:2008-June-07-13-som.jpg|'''2008 June 7th to 13th'''<br>The discussion seems to have been focused on features ("needs") and
Image:2008-May-31-June-06-som.jpg|2008 May 31st to June 6th
+
documentation.
Image:2008-May-24-30-som.jpg|2008 May 24th to 30th
+
Image:2008-May-31-June-06-som.jpg|'''2008 May 31st to June 6th'''<br>Discussion seems to have been focused on Sugar development: what is used, needed, made and to be made.
Image:2008-May-17-23-som.jpg|2008 May 17th to 23rd
+
Image:2008-May-24-30-som.jpg|'''2008 May 24th to 30th'''
Image:2008-May-10-16-som.jpg|2008 May 10th to 16th
+
Image:2008-May-17-23-som.jpg|'''2008 May 17th to 23rd'''
Image:2008-May-01-09-som.jpg|2008 May 1st to 9th
+
Image:2008-May-10-16-som.jpg|'''2008 May 10th to 16th'''
 +
Image:2008-May-01-09-som.jpg|'''2008 May 1st to 9th'''
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Image:2008-June-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 June
+
Image:2008-June-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 June'''
Image:2008-May-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 May
+
Image:2008-May-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 May'''
Image:2008-April-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 April
+
Image:2008-April-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 April'''
Image:2008-March-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 March
+
Image:2008-March-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 March'''
Image:2008-February-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 February
+
Image:2008-February-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 February'''
Image:2008-January-Sugar-som.jpg|2008 January
+
Image:2008-January-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2008 January'''
Image:2007-December-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 December
+
Image:2007-December-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 December'''
Image:2007-November-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 November
+
Image:2007-November-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 November'''
Image:2007-October-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 October
+
Image:2007-October-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 October'''
Image:2007-September-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 September
+
Image:2007-September-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 September'''
Image:2007-August-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 August
+
Image:2007-August-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 August'''
Image:2007-July-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 July
+
Image:2007-July-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 July'''
Image:2007-June-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 June
+
Image:2007-June-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 June'''
Image:2007-May-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 May
+
Image:2007-May-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 May'''
Image:2007-April-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 April
+
Image:2007-April-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 April'''
Image:2007-March-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 March
+
Image:2007-March-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 March'''
Image:2007-February-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 February
+
Image:2007-February-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 February'''
Image:2007-January-Sugar-som.jpg|2007 January
+
Image:2007-January-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2007 January'''
Image:2006-December-Sugar-som.jpg|2006 December
+
Image:2006-December-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2006 December'''
Image:2006-November-Sugar-som.jpg|2006 November
+
Image:2006-November-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2006 November'''
Image:2006-October-Sugar-som.jpg|2006 October
+
Image:2006-October-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2006 October'''
Image:2006-September-Sugar-som.jpg|2006 September
+
Image:2006-September-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2006 September'''
Image:2006-August-som.jpg|2006 August
+
Image:2006-August-som.jpg|'''2006 August'''
Image:2006-July-Sugar-som.jpg|2006 July
+
Image:2006-July-Sugar-som.jpg|'''2006 July'''
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  

Revision as of 14:17, 13 July 2008

Kohonen Self Organising Maps

Legend

Self Organising Maps (SOMs) can act as 2D spatial summariser visualisations of multidimensional data. In the maps shown here, text distance metrics are generated from the weekly/monthly content on some of the more active mailing lists. Using a geographic like landscape metaphor, the height (colour gradient) indicates features with strong associations to all other features; proximity represents association between specific features (e.g. related words), and label size is a rough guide to basic frequency of a feature. There are many "correct" map layouts for the same set of data, each map generation will usually settle into a slightly different set of local minima, but the associations are no less valid for each. After removing linguistic junk words, and word stemming, the maps currently pick the weeks/months top ~200 features by frequency. Each is a continuous surface and wraps around north/south and east/west (surface of a torus), so if you find an interesting label to one side, remember to check it's neighbours on the opposite side.

What Do They Show?

Well, you could just treat them like tag clouds, showing the top 200 word features used on the list for a given week/month, but the maps also hold spacial information. Word features that appear close together on the map were used closely (on average) in text content from the list. A height metaphor is also used to indicate the features with the strongest mean associations - the map auto centres on the highest pink peak features, these words have the strongest associations with all the rest of the features on the map; word features in the blue and green areas have weaker mean associations relative to the pink highs, but should not be considered negatively as they will often be tightly associated with surrounding neighbours.

It's An Education Project Mailing List

Weekly maps generated with posts from the IAEP mailing list - most recent maps shown first.

Sugar Mailing List

Monthly maps generated with posts from the Sugar mailing list - most recent maps shown first.

Future

The mapping algorithms and visualisation style will continue to be refined, details will be posted here on any significant modifications. The code base was originally designed for bulk text documents from a single author, tested on works of literature from Project Gutenberg.