581 lines
27 KiB
Markdown
581 lines
27 KiB
Markdown
Log data from the Multi-Touch Table at the HAUM
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================
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The Multi Touch Table at the Herzog-Anton-Ulrich-Museum (HAUM) in
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Braunschweig gives visitors of the Museum the opportunity to interact
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with about 70 artworks and 3 virtual cards containing information about
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the museum and its layout. The table was installed at the museum in
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October 2016 and since November 2016 log files from interactions of
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visitors of the museum have been collected. These log files are in an
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unstructured format and cannot be easily analyzed. The purpose of the
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following document is to describe how the data haven been transformed
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and which decisions have been made along the way.
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The implementation of the steps described here can be found at:
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<https://gitea.iwm-tuebingen.de/R/mtt>.
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# Data structure
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The log files contain lines that indicate the beginning and end of
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possible activities that can be performed when interacting with the
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artworks on the table. The layout of the table looks like pictures have
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been tossed on a large table. Every artwork is visible at the start
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configuration. People can move the pictures on the table, they can be
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scaled and rotated. Additionally, the virtual picture cards can be
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flipped in order to find more information of the artwork on the “back”
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of the card. One has to press a little `i` for more information in one
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of the bottom corners of the card. On the back of the card two to six
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information cards can be found with a teaser text about a certain topic.
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These topic cards can be opened and a hypertext with detailed
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information opens. Within these hypertexts certain technical terms can
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be clicked for lay people to get more information. This also opens up a
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pop-up. The events encoded in the raw log files therefore have the
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following structure.
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"Start Application" --> Start Application
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"Show Application"
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"Transform start" --> Move
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"Transform stop"
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"Show Info" --> Flip Card
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"Show Front"
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"Artwork/OpenCard" --> Open Topic
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"Artwork/CloseCard"
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"ShowPopup" --> Open Popup
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"HidePopup"
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The right side shows what events can be extracted from these raw lines.
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The “Start Application” is not an event in the original sense since it
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only indicates if the table was started or maybe reset itself. This is
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not an interaction with the table and therefore not interesting in
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itself. All “Start Application” and “Show Application” are therefore
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excluded from the data when further processed and are only in the raw
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log files.
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# Parsing the raw log files
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The first step is to parse the raw log files that are stored by the
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application as text files in a rather unstructured format to a format
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that can be read by common statistics software packages. The data are
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therefore transferred to a spread sheet format. The following section
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describes what problems were encountered while doing this.
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## Corrupt lines
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When reading the files containing the raw logs into R, a warning appears
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that says
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Warning messages:
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incomplete final line found on '2016/2016_11_18-11_31_0.log'
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incomplete final line found on '2016/2016_11_18-11_38_30.log'
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incomplete final line found on '2016/2016_11_18-11_40_36.log'
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...
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When you open these files, it looks like the last line contains some
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binary content. It is unclear why and how this happens. So when reading
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the data, these lines were removed. A warning will be given that
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indicates how many files have been affected.
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## Extracted variables from raw log files
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The following variables (columns in the data frame) are extracted from
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the raw log file:
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- `fileId`: Containing the zero-left-padded file name of the raw log
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file the data line has been extracted from
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- `folder`: The folder names in which the raw log files haven been
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organized in. For the HAUM data set, the data are sorted by year
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(folders 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023).
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- `date`: Extracted timestamp from the raw log file in the format
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`yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss`.
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- `timeMs`: Containing a timestamp in Milliseconds that restarts with
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every new raw log files.
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- `event`: Start and stop event tags. See above for possible values.
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- `item`: Identifier of the different items. This is a three-digit
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(left-padded) number. The numbers of the items correspond to the
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folder names in `/ContentEyevisit/eyevisit_cards_light/` and were
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orginally taken from the museums catalogue.
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- `popup`: Name of the pop-up opened. This is only interesting for
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“openPopup” events.
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- `topic`: The number of the topic card that has been opened at the back
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of the item card. See below for a more detailed descripttion what
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these numbers mean.
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- `x`: Value of x-coordinate in pixel on the 4K-Display
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($3840 \times 2160$)
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- `y`: Value of y-coordinate in pixel
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- `scale`: Number in 128 bit that indicates how much the card has been
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scaled
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- `rotation`: Degree of rotation in start configuration.
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<!-- TODO: Nach welchem Zeitintervall resettet sich der Tisch wieder in die
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Ausgangskonfiguration? -> PM needs to look it up -->
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## Variables after “closing of events”
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The raw log data consist of start and stop events for each event type.
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After preprocessing four event types are extracted: `move`, `flipCard`,
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`openTopic`, and `openPopup`. Except for the `move` events, which can
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occur at any time when interacting with an item card on the table, the
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events have a hierarchical order: An item card first needs to be flipped
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(`flipCard`), then the topic cards on the back of the card can be opened
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(`openTopic`), and finally pop-ups on these topic cards can be opened
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(`openPopup`). This implies that the event `openPopup` can only be
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present for a certain item, if the card has already been flipped (i.e.,
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an event `flipCard` for the same item has already occured).
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After preprocessing, the data frame is now in a wide format with columns
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for the start and the stop of each event and contains the following
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variables:
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- `fileId.start` / `fileId.stop`: See above.
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- `date.start` / `date.stop`: See above.
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- `folder`: Containing the folder name (see above)
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- `case`: A numerical variable indicating cases in the data. A “case”
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indicates an interaction interval and could be defined in different
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ways. Right now a new case begins, when no event occurred for 20
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seconds or longer.
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- `path`: A path is defined as one interaction with one item A path can
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either start with a `flipCard` event or when an item has been touched
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for the first time within this case. A path ends with the item card
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being flipped close again or with the last movement of the card within
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this case. One case can contain several paths with the same item when
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the item is flipped open and flipped close again several times within
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a short time.
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- `glossar`: An indicator variable with values 0/1 that tracks if a
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pop-up has been opened from the glossar folder. These pop-ups can be
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assigned to the wrong item since it is not possible to do this
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algorithmically. It is possible that two items are flipped open that
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could both link to the same pop-up from a glossar. The indicator
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variable is left as a variable, so that these pop-ups can be easily
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deleted from the data. Right now, glossar entries can be ignored
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completely by setting an argument and this is done by default. Using
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the pop-ups from the glossar will need a lot more love, before it
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behaves satisfactorily.
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- `event`: Indicating the event. Can take tha values `move`, `flipCard`,
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`openTopic`, and `openPopup`.
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- `item`: Identifier of the different artworks and information cards.
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This is a three-digit (left-padded) number. See above.
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- `timeMs.start` / `timeMs.stop`: See above.
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- `duration`: Calculated by $timeMs.stop - timeMs.start$ in
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Milliseconds. Needs to be adjusted for events spanning more than one
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log file by a factor of $60,000 \times \text{number of logfiles}$. See
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below for details.
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- `topic`: See above.
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- `popup`: See above.
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- `x.start` / `x.stop`: See above.
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- `y.start` / `y.stop`: See above.
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- `distance`: Euclidean distande calculated from $(x.start, y.start)$
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and $(x.stop, y.stop)$.
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- `scale.start` / `scale.stop`: See above.
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- `scaleSize`: Relative scaling of item card, calculated by
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$\frac{scale.stop}{scale.start}$.
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- `rotation.start` / `rotation.stop`: See above.
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- `rotationDegree`: Difference of rotation from $rotation.stop$ to
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$rotation.start$.
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## How unclosed events are handled
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Events do not necessarily need to be completed. A person can, e.g.,
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leave the table and not flip the item card close again. For `flipCard`,
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`openTopic`, and `openPopup` the data frame contains `NA` when the event
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does not complete. For `move` events it happens quite often that a start
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event follows a start event and a stop event follows a stop event.
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Technically a move event cannot *not* be finished and the number of
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events without a start or stop indicate that the time resolution was not
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sufficient to catch all these events accurately. Double start and stop
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`move` events have therefore been deleted from the data set.
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## Additional meta data
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For the HAUM data, I added meta data on state holidays and school
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vacations.
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This led to the following additional variables:
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- `holiday`
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- `vacations`
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# Problems and how I handled them
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This lists some problems with the log data that required decisions.
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These decisions influence the outcome and maybe even the data quality.
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Hence, I tried to document how I handled these problems and explain the
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decisions I made.
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## Weird behavior of `timeMs` and neg. `duration` values
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`timeMs` resets itself every time a new log file starts. This means that
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the durations of events spanning more than one log file must be
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adjusted. Instead of just calculating $timeMs.stop - timeMs.start$,
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`timeMs.start` must be subtracted from the maximum duration of the log
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file where the event started ($600,000 ms$) and the `timeMs.stop` must
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be added. If the event spans more than two log files, a multiple of
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$600,000$ must be taken, e.g. for three log files it must be:
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$2 \times 600,000 - timeMs.start + timeMs.stop$ and so on.
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![](README_files/figure-gfm/timems-1.png)<!-- -->
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The boxplot shows that we have a continuous range of values within one
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log file but that `timeMs` does not increase over log files. I kept
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`timeMs.start` and `timeMs.stop` and also `fileId.start` and
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`fileId.stop` in the data frame, so it is clear when events span more
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than one log file.
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<!--
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Infos from the programmer:
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"Bin außerdem gerade den Code von damals durchgegangen. Das Logging läuft
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so: Mit Start der Anwendung wird alle 10 Minuten ein neues Logfile
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erstellt. Die Startzeit, von der aus die Duration berechnet wird, wird
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jeweils neu gesetzt. Duration ist also nicht "Dauer seit Start der
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Anwendung" sondern "Dauer seit Restart des Loggers". Deine Vermutung ist
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also richtig - es sollte keine Durations >10 Minuten geben. Der erste
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Eintrag eines Logfiles kann alles zwischen 0 und 10 Minuten sein (je
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nachdem, ob der Tisch zum Zeitpunkt des neuen Logging-Intervalls in
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Benutzung war). Wenn ein Case also über 2+ Logs verteilt ist, musst du auf
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die Duration jeweils 10 Minuten pro Logfile nach dem ersten addieren, damit
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es passt."
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-->
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## Left padding of file IDs
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The file names of the raw log files are automatically generated and
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contain a timestamp. This timestamp is not well formed. First, it
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contains an incorrect month. The months go from 0 to 11 which means,
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that the file name `2016_11_15-12_12_57.log` was collected on December
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15, 2016 at 12:12 pm. Another problem is that the file names are not
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zero left padded, e.g., `2016_11_15-12_2_57.log`. This file was
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collected on December 15, 2016 at 12:02 pm and therefore before the file
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above. But most sorting algorithms, will sort these files in the order
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shown below. In order to preprocess the data and close events that
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belong together, the data need to be sorted by events and artworks
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repeatedly. In order to get them back in the correct time order, it is
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necessary to order them based on three variables: `fileId.start`,
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`date.start` and `timeMs.start`. The file IDs therefore need to sort in
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the correct order (again see below for example). I zero left padded the
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log file names within the data frame using it as an identifier. These
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“file names” do not correspond exactly to the original raw log file
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names. This needs to be kept in mind when doing any kind of matching
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etc.
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## what it looked like before left padding
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# 1422 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_2_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:56 599671 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.3000000 13.26874254
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# 1423 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 621 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.3000000 13.26523465
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# 1424 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 677 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997736 13.26239605
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# 1425 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 774 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2999345 13.26239605
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# 1426 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 850 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997107 13.26223362
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# 1427 ../data/haum_logs_2016-2023/_2016b/2016_11_15-12_2_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 599916 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997771 13.26523465
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## what it looks like now
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# 1422 2016_11_15-12_02_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:56 599671 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.3000000 13.26874254
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# 1423 2016_11_15-12_02_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 599916 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997771 13.26523465
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# 1424 2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 621 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.3000000 13.26523465
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# 1425 2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 677 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997736 13.26239605
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# 1426 2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 774 Transform start 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2999345 13.26239605
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# 1427 2016_11_15-12_12_57.log 2016-12-15 12:12:57 850 Transform stop 076 076.xml NA 2092.25 2008.00 0.2997107 13.26223362
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## Timestamps repeat
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The timestamps in the `date` variable record year, month, day, hour,
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minute and seconds. Since one second is not a very short time interval
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for a move on a touch display, this is not fine grained enough to bring
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events into the correct order, meaning there are events from the same
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log file having the same timestamp and even events from different log
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files having the same timestamp. The log files get written about every
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10 minutes (which can easily be seen when looking at the file names of
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the raw log files). So in order to get events in the correct order, it
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is necessary to first order by file ID, within file ID then sort by
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timestamp `date` and then within these more coarse grained timestamps
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sort be `timeMs`. But as explained above, `timeMs` can only be sorted
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within one file ID, since they do not increase consistently over log
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files, but have a new setoff for each raw log file.
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## x,y-coordinates outside of display range
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The display of the Multi-Touch-Table is a 4K-display with 3840 x 2160
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pixels. When you plot the start and stop coordinates, the display is
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clearly distinguishable. However, a lot of points are outside of the
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display range. This can happen, when the art objects are scaled and then
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moved to the very edge of the table. Then it will record pixels outside
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of the table. These are actually valid data points and I will leave them
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as is.
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``` r
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datlogs <- read.table("code/results/event_logfiles_2024-02-21_16-07-33.csv", sep = ";",
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header = TRUE)
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par(mfrow = c(1, 2))
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plot(y.start ~ x.start, datlogs)
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abline(v = c(0, 3840), h = c(0, 2160), col = "blue", lwd = 2)
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plot(y.stop ~ x.stop, datlogs)
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abline(v = c(0, 3840), h = c(0, 2160), col = "blue", lwd = 2)
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```
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![](README_files/figure-gfm/xycoord-1.png)<!-- -->
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``` r
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aggregate(cbind(x.start, x.stop, y.start, y.stop) ~ 1, datlogs, mean)
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```
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## x.start x.stop y.start y.stop
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## 1 1978.202 1975.876 1137.481 1133.494
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## Pop-ups from glossar cannot be assigned to a specific item
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All the information, pictures and texts for the topics and pop-ups are
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stored in
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`/data/haum/ContentEyevisit/eyevisit_cards_light/<item_number>`. Among
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other things, each folder contains XML-files with the information about
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any technical terms that can be opened from the hypertexts on the topic
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cards. Often these information are item dependent and then the
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corresponding XML-file is in the folder for this item. Sometimes,
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however, more general terms can be opened. In order to avoid multiple
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files containing the same information, these were stored in a folder
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called `glossar` and get accessed from there. The raw log files only
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contain the path to this glossar entry and did not record from which
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item it was accessed. I tried to assign these glossar entries to the
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correct items. The (very heuristic) approach was this:
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1. Create a lookup table with all XML-file names (possible pop-ups)
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from the glossar folder and what items possibly call them. This was
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stored as an `RData` object for easier handling but should maybe be
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stored in a more interoperable format.
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2. I went through all possible pop-ups in this lookup table and stored
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the items that are associated with it.
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3. I created a sub data frame without move events (since they can never
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be associated with a pop-up) and went through every line and looked
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up if an item and a topic card had been opened. If this was the case
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and a glossar entry came up before the item was closed again, I
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assigned this item to the glossar entry.
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This is heuristic since it is possible that several topic cards from
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different items are opened simultaneously and the glossar pop-up could
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be opened from either one (it could even be more than two, of course).
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In these cases the item that was opened closest to the glossar pop-up
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has been assigned, but this can never be completely error free.
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And this heuristic only assigns a little more than half of the glossar
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entries. Since my heuristic only looks for the last item that has been
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opened and if this item is a possible candidate it misses all glossar
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pop-ups where another item has been opened in between. This is still an
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open TODO to write a more elaborate algorithm.
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All glossar pop-ups that do not get matched with an item are removed
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from the data set with a warning if the argument `glossar = TRUE` is
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set. Otherwise the glossar entries will be ignored completely.
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## Assign a `case` variable based on “time heuristic”
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One thing needed in order to work with the data set and use it for
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machine learning algorithms like process mining, is a variable that
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tries to identify a case. A case variable will structure the data frame
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in a way that navigation behavior can actually be investigated. However,
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we do not know if several people are standing around the table
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interacting with it or just one very active person. The simplest way to
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define a case variable is to just use a time limit between events. This
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means that when the table has not been interacted with for, e.g., 20
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seconds than it is assumed that a person moved on and a new person
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started interacting with the table. This is the easiest heuristic and
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implemented at the moment. Process mining shows that this simple
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approach works in a way that the correct process gets extracted by the
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algorithm.
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In order to investigate user behavior on a more fine grained level, it
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will be necessary to come up with a more elaborate approach. A better,
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still simple approach, could be to use this kind of time limit and
|
||
additionally look at the distance between items interacted with within
|
||
one time window. When items are far apart it seems plausible that more
|
||
than one person interacted with them. Very short time lapses between
|
||
events on different items could also be an indicator that more than one
|
||
person is interacting with the table.
|
||
|
||
## Assign a `path` variable
|
||
|
||
The `path` variable is supposed to show one interaction trace with one
|
||
artwork. Meaning it starts when an artwork is touched or flipped and
|
||
stops when it is closed again. It is easy to assign a path from flipping
|
||
a card over opening (maybe several) topics and pop-ups for this artwork
|
||
card until closing this card again. But one would like to assign the
|
||
same path to move events surrounding this interaction. Again, this is
|
||
not possible in an algorithmic way but only heuristically.
|
||
|
||
Again, I used a time cutoff for this. First, if a `move` event occurs,
|
||
it is checked, if the same item has been flipped less than 20 seconds
|
||
beforehand. If yes, the same path indicator is assigned to this `move`.
|
||
If not, temporarily a new “move indicator” is assigned. Then, a
|
||
“backward pass” is applied, where it is checked if the same item is
|
||
opened less than 20 seconds *after* the event occurs. If yes, that path
|
||
indicator is assigned. For all the remaining moves, a new path number is
|
||
assigned. This corresponds to items being moved without being flipped.
|
||
|
||
## A `move` event does not record any change
|
||
|
||
Most of the events in the log files are move events. Additionally, many
|
||
of these move events are recorded but they do not indicate any change,
|
||
meaning the only difference is the timestamp. All other variables
|
||
indicating moves like `x.start` and `x.stop`, `rotation.start` and
|
||
`rotation.stop` etc. do not show *any* change. They represent about 2/3
|
||
of all move events. These events are probably short touches of the table
|
||
without an actual interaction. They were therefore removed from the data
|
||
set.
|
||
|
||
## Card indices go from 0 to 7 (instead of 0 to 5 as expected)
|
||
|
||
In the beginning I thought that the number for topics was the index of
|
||
where the card was presented on the back of the item. But this is not
|
||
correct. It is the number of the topic. There are eight topics in total:
|
||
|
||
Indices for topics:
|
||
0 artist
|
||
1 thema
|
||
2 komposition
|
||
3 leben des kunstwerks
|
||
4 details
|
||
5 licht und farbe
|
||
6 extra info
|
||
7 technik
|
||
|
||
On the back of items, there can be between 2 to 6 topic cards. Several
|
||
of these topic cards can be about the same topic, e.g., there can be two
|
||
topic cards assigned to the topic `thema`. It is impossible to find out
|
||
if the same topic card was opened several times or if different topic
|
||
cards with the same topic were opened from the same item. See example
|
||
below for item “001”.
|
||
|
||
## item file_name topic
|
||
## 1 001 001_dargestellte.xml thema
|
||
## 2 001 001_thema1.xml thema
|
||
## 3 001 001_leben.xml leben des kunstwerks
|
||
## 4 001 001_leben3.xml leben des kunstwerks
|
||
## 5 001 001_thema2.xml thema
|
||
## 6 001 001_thema.xml thema
|
||
|
||
## New artworks “504” and “505” starting October 2022
|
||
|
||
When I read in the complete data frame for the first time, all of the
|
||
sudden there were 72 instead of 70 items. It seems like these two
|
||
artworks appear on October 21, 2022.
|
||
|
||
``` r
|
||
summary(as.Date(datraw[datraw$item %in% c("504", "505"), "date"]))
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
|
||
## "2022-10-21" "2023-01-11" "2023-03-08" "2023-03-09" "2023-05-21" "2023-07-05"
|
||
|
||
The artworks seem to be have updated in general after October 21, 2022.
|
||
The following table shows which items were presented in which years.
|
||
|
||
``` r
|
||
xtabs(~ item + lubridate::year(date.start), datlogs)
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## lubridate::year(date.start)
|
||
## item 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2022 2023
|
||
## 1 277 4082 1912 1434 424 394 1315
|
||
## 3 485 6730 3126 2356 528 457 1124
|
||
## 19 714 8656 4028 2743 660 698 1595
|
||
## 20 595 8461 3996 2983 938 657 1355
|
||
## 24 497 6638 2912 2251 649 439 1028
|
||
## 27 567 5959 3112 2318 651 711 1324
|
||
## 28 601 9329 4394 3056 778 762 1570
|
||
## 29 425 6865 3830 2365 516 615 1174
|
||
## 31 289 4118 2051 1218 291 296 675
|
||
## 32 562 7016 3477 2253 726 766 1647
|
||
## 33 509 4936 2242 1449 555 358 666
|
||
## 36 434 4505 2276 1668 373 387 976
|
||
## 37 242 4478 2182 1554 339 423 1168
|
||
## 38 480 4617 2144 1397 371 381 784
|
||
## 39 395 3227 1313 1003 237 161 622
|
||
## 41 282 3329 1303 1022 225 209 701
|
||
## 42 203 3113 1307 903 242 191 421
|
||
## 43 115 2420 1089 806 176 219 486
|
||
## 45 1491 13561 5924 4474 966 585 1828
|
||
## 46 903 9181 5340 3812 961 944 1648
|
||
## 47 306 4949 2395 1510 750 297 675
|
||
## 48 723 10455 5384 4162 1328 948 2031
|
||
## 49 433 4326 2124 1414 434 431 809
|
||
## 51 564 7837 4577 2991 884 659 1370
|
||
## 52 447 5021 2104 1729 471 349 840
|
||
## 54 424 5068 2816 2008 529 370 918
|
||
## 55 358 4859 2069 1428 341 403 1303
|
||
## 57 860 14264 6625 5092 1410 1221 2714
|
||
## 60 555 6865 3539 2336 639 586 1415
|
||
## 62 547 6736 3803 2210 795 633 1322
|
||
## 63 251 3677 1827 1241 300 282 527
|
||
## 66 552 6004 2774 1977 505 373 932
|
||
## 69 394 3730 1827 1438 272 206 680
|
||
## 70 226 3766 1843 973 293 268 703
|
||
## 71 557 6160 2490 1846 570 323 839
|
||
## 72 426 6194 2857 2129 508 635 1553
|
||
## 73 432 6125 2880 1821 583 395 939
|
||
## 75 258 5885 2418 1562 369 257 645
|
||
## 76 861 12435 6253 4214 1753 1153 2268
|
||
## 77 816 8595 4197 2897 699 674 1452
|
||
## 78 410 5632 2498 1924 394 408 850
|
||
## 80 1650 25687 12429 7782 1975 1712 4433
|
||
## 83 644 8618 4720 3026 987 1027 2294
|
||
## 84 184 2121 1231 759 231 254 465
|
||
## 87 149 1618 722 632 99 0 0
|
||
## 88 513 6996 3493 2272 539 533 1420
|
||
## 89 214 2204 950 723 156 0 0
|
||
## 90 281 3756 1372 1143 403 320 932
|
||
## 93 613 8528 4224 3015 696 1174 2058
|
||
## 98 462 6662 3265 2565 704 670 1453
|
||
## 99 180 4162 1653 1454 363 411 868
|
||
## 101 414 4209 1859 1282 392 411 981
|
||
## 103 677 8758 4366 3165 1045 909 1871
|
||
## 104 423 5256 2381 1865 463 467 933
|
||
## 107 181 2101 1106 788 205 146 339
|
||
## 109 321 4001 1619 1106 292 188 453
|
||
## 110 489 5846 2785 2008 494 387 923
|
||
## 125 640 8435 4519 3334 926 0 0
|
||
## 129 598 11322 5046 3369 910 1131 1682
|
||
## 145 419 7821 3945 2694 706 740 1396
|
||
## 176 507 8465 3968 2787 687 552 1544
|
||
## 180 516 7563 3720 2765 585 550 1272
|
||
## 183 377 4014 1819 1741 346 251 675
|
||
## 187 340 4222 2165 1753 319 312 734
|
||
## 197 426 7710 3603 2510 671 602 1217
|
||
## 229 303 4872 2360 1891 482 389 1005
|
||
## 231 271 3606 1851 1239 318 236 467
|
||
## 501 1915 15968 7849 5060 1157 890 2989
|
||
## 502 1212 14550 7111 4749 1105 883 2752
|
||
## 503 1308 15218 8632 6399 1626 870 2558
|
||
## 504 0 0 0 0 0 363 662
|
||
## 505 0 0 0 0 0 426 1533
|
||
|
||
It shows that the artworks haven been updated after the Corona pandemic.
|
||
I think, the table was also moved to a different location at that point.
|