550 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
550 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
---
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title: "Background information about MTT data"
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author: "Nora Wickelmaier"
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date: "`r Sys.Date()`"
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output:
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html_document:
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number_sections: true
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toc: true
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---
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```{r, include = FALSE}
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# setwd("C:/Users/nwickelmaier/Nextcloud/Documents/MDS/2023ss/60100_master_thesis")
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devtools::load_all("../../../software/mtt")
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```
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# Log data from the Multi-Touch Table at the HAUM
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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 with
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67 artworks and 3 tiles containing information about the museum and its
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layout. The table was installed at the institute in October 2016 and since
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November 2016 log files from interactions of visitors of the museum have
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been collected. These log files are in an unstructured format and cannot be
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easily analyzed. The purpose of the following document is to describe how
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the data haven been transformed and which decisions have been made a long
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the way.
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# Data structure
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The log files contain lines that indicate the beginning and end of possible
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actions that can be performed when interacting with the artworks on the
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table. The layout of the table looks like 70 pictures have been tossed on a
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large table. Every artwork is visible at the start configuration. People
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can move the pictures on the table, they can be scaled and rotated.
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Additionally, the virtual picture cards can be flipped in order to find
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more information of the artwork on the "back" of the card. One has to press
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a little `i` for more information in one of the bottom corners of the card.
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On the back of the card two (?) to six information cards can be found with
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a teaser text about a certain topic. These topic cards can be opened and a
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hypertext with detailed information pops up. Within these hypertexts
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certain technical terms can be clicked for lay people to get more
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information. This also opens up a pop-up. The events encoded in the raw log
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files therefore have the following structure.
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```
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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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```
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The right side shows what events can be extracted from these raw lines. The
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"Start Application" is not an event in the original sense since it only
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indicates if the table was started or maybe reset itself. This is not an
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interaction with the table and therefore not interesting in itself. All
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"Start Application" and "Show Application" are therefore excluded from the
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data when further processed and are only in the raw 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 that
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is better handled. The data are therefore transferred to a spread sheet
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format. The following section describes what problems were encountered
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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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```
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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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```
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When you open these files, it looks like the last line contains some binary
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content. It is unclear why and how this happens. So when reading the data,
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these lines were removed. A warning will be given that indicates how many
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files have been affected.
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## Units of the variables
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* Welche Einheit haben x und y? Pixel? --> yes
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* Welche Einheit hat scale? --> some kind if bit, does not matter, when
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calculating a ratio
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* rotation wirklich degree? --> yes
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* 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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## How unclosed events are handled
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## How a case is defined
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* Herausfinden, ob mehr als eine Person am Tisch steht?
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- Sliding window, in der Anzahl von Artworks gezählt wird? Oder wie weit
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angefasste Artworks voneinander entfernt sind?
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- Man kann sowas schon "sehen" in den Logs - aber wie kann ich es
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automatisiert rausziehen? Was ist meine Definition von
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"Interaktionsboost"?
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- Egal wie wir es machen, geht es auf den "Event-Log-Daten"?
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## Additional meta data
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* Anreicherung der Log-Daten mit weiteren Metadaten? Was wäre interessant?
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- Metadata on artworks like, name, artist, type of artwork, epoch, etc.
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- School vacations and holidays
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- Special exhibits at the museum
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- Number of visitors per day (bei Sven noch mal nachhaken?)
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- Age structure of visitors per day?
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- ... ????
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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. These
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decisions influence the outcome and maybe even the data quality. Hence, I
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tried to document how I handled these problems and explain the decisions I
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made.
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## Weird behavior of `timeMs` and neg. `duration` values
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I think the negative duration values happen, when an event starts in one
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log file and completes in another one. The variable `timeMs` seems to be
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continuous within one log file but not over several log files.
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```{r, results = FALSE, fig.show = TRUE}
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# Read data
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dat0 <- read.table("data/haum/raw_logfiles_small_2023-09-26_13-50-20.csv", sep = ";",
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header = TRUE)
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dat0$date <- as.POSIXct(dat0$date)
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dat0$glossar <- ifelse(dat0$artwork == "glossar", 1, 0)
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# Remove irrelevant events
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dat <- subset(dat0, !(dat0$event %in% c("Start Application",
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"Show Application")))
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# Add trace variable
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artworks <- unique(stats::na.omit(dat$artwork))
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artworks <- artworks[artworks != "glossar"]
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glossar_files <- unique(subset(dat, dat$artwork == "glossar")$popup)
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glossar_dict <- create_glossardict(artworks, glossar_files,
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xmlpath = "data/haum/ContentEyevisit/eyevisit_cards_light/")
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dat1 <- add_trace(dat, glossar_dict)
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# Close events
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dat2 <- rbind(close_events(dat1, "move"),
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close_events(dat1, "flipCard"),
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close_events(dat1, "openTopic"),
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close_events(dat1, "openPopup"))
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dat2 <- dat2[order(dat2$date.start, dat2$fileId), ]
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plot(timeMs ~ as.factor(fileId), dat[1:5000,], xlab = "fileId")
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```
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The boxplot shows that we have a continuous range of values within one log
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file but that `timeMs` does not increase over log files. Since it seems not
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possible to fix this in a consistent way, I set all durations to `NA` where
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`fileId.start` and `fileId.stop` are not identical. I kept `timeMs.start`
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and `timeMs.stop` and also `fileId.start` and `fileId.stop` in the data
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frame, so it is clear why there are no durations. The other
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NOTE: Part of this problem was that time stamps that are part of the log
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file names are not zero-left-padded and therefore the files were not in the
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correct order when read into R. When zero left padding these file IDs and
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sorting by them and then by `date.start` within, some of the durations are
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exactly fixed. Unfortunately, only three `move` events were fixed, since it
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only fixed irregularities *within* one log file. See below for more
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details.
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UPDATE: By now I remove all events that span more than one log file. This
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lets me improve speed considerably.
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UPDATE: Infos from Philipp:
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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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## Left padding of file IDs
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The file names of the raw log files are automatically generated and contain
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a time stamp. This time stamp is not well formed. First, it contains an
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incorrect month. The months go from 0 to 11 which means, that the file name
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`2016_11_15-12_12_57.log` was collected on December 15, 2016 at 12:12 pm.
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Another problem is that the file names are not zero left padded, e.g.,
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`2016_11_15-12_2_57.log`. This file was collected on December 15, 2016 at
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12:02 pm and therefore before the file above. But most sorting algorithms,
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will sort these files in the order shown below. In order to preprocess the
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data and close events that belong together, the data need to be sorted by
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events and artworks repeatedly. In order to get them back in the correct
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time order, it is necessary to order them based on three variables:
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`fileId`, `date.start` and `timeMs`. The file IDs therefore need to
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sort in the correct order (again see below for example). I zero left padded
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the 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 names.
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This needs to be kept in mind when doing any kind of matching etc.
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```
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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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```
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## Timestamps repeat
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The time stamps 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 for
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a move on a touch display, this is not fine grained enough to bring events
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into the correct order, meaning there are events from the same log file
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having the same time stamp and even events from different log files having
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the same time stamp. The log files get written about every 10 minutes
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(which can easily be seen when looking at the file names of the raw log
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files). So in order to get events in the correct order, it is necessary to
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first order by file ID, within file ID then sort by time stamp `date` and
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then within these more coarse grained time stamps sort be `timeMs`. But as
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explained above, `timeMs` can only be sorted within one file ID, since they
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do not increase consistently over log files, but have a new setoff for each
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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 to distinguish. However, a lot of points are outside of the display
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range. This can happen, when the art objects are scaled and then moved to
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the very edge of the table. Then it will record pixels outside of the
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table. These are actually valid data points and I will leave them as is.
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```{r}
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par(mfrow = c(1, 2))
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plot(y.start ~ x.start, dat2)
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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, dat2)
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abline(v = c(0, 3840), h = c(0, 2160), col = "blue", lwd = 2)
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aggregate(cbind(x.start, x.stop, y.start, y.stop) ~ 1, dat2, mean)
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```
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## Pop-ups from glossar cannot be assigned to a specific artwork
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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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`/Logfiles/ContentEyevisit/eyevisit_cards_light/<artwork_number>`. Among
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other things, each folder contains XML-files with the information about any
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technical terms that can be opened from the hypertexts on the topic cards.
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Often these information are artwork dependent and then the corresponding
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XML-file is in the folder for this artwork. Sometimes, however, more
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general terms can be opened. In order to avoid multiple files containing
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the same informatione, these were stored in a folder called `glossar` and
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get accessed from there. The raw log files only contain the path to this
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glossar entry and did not record from which artwork it was accessed. I
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tried to assign these glossar entries to the correct artworks. The (very
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heuristic) approach was this:
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1. Create a lookup table with all XML-file names (possible pop-ups) from
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the glossar folder and what artworks possibly call them. This was stored
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as an `RData` object for easier handling but should maybe be stored in a
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more interoperable format.
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2. I went through all possible pop-ups in this lookup table and stored the
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artworks that are associated with it.
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3. I created a sub data frame without move events (since they can never be
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associated with a pop-up) and went through every line and looked up if
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an artwork and a topic card had been opened. If this was the case and a
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glossar entry came up before the artwork was closed again, I assigned
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this artwork to this glossar entry.
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This is heuristic since it is possible that several topic cards from
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different artworks 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). In
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these cases the artwork that was opened closest to the glossar pop-up has
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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 artwork that has been
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opened and if this artwork is a possible candidate it misses all glossar
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pop-ups where another artwork 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 artwork are removed
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from the data set with a warning.
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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 machine
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learning algorithms like process mining is a variable that tries to
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identify a case. A case variable will structure the data frame in a way
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that navigation behavior can actually be investigated. However, we do not
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know if several people are standing around the table interacting with it or
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just one very active person. The simplest way to define a case variable is
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to just use a time limit between events. This means that when the table has
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not been interacted with for, e.g., 20 seconds than it is assumed that a
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person moved on and a new person started interacting with the table. This
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is the easiest heuristic and implemented at the moment. Process mining
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shows that this simple approach works in a way that the correct process
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gets extracted by the algorithm.
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In order to investigate user behavior on a more fine grained level, it will
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be necessary to come up with a more elaborate approach. A better, still
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simple approach could be to use this kind of time limit and additionally
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look at the distance between artworks interacted with within one time
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window. When artworks are far apart is seems plausible that more than one
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person interacted with them. Very short time lapses between events on
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different artworks could also be an indicator that more than one person is
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interacting with the table.
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## Assign a `trace` variable
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The `trace` variable is supposed to show one interaction trace with one
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artwork. Meaning it starts when an artwork is touched or flipped and stops
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when it is closed again. It is easy to assign a trace from flipping a card
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over opening (maybe several) topics and pop-ups for this artwork card until
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closing this card again. But one would like to assign the same trace to
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move events surrounding this interaction. Again, this is not possible in an
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algorithmic way but only heuristically. I used the `case` variable in order
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to get meaningful units around the artworks.
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If within one case only a single trace for a single artwork was opened, I
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assigned this trace to the moves associated with this artwork. I (quite
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often) happens that within one case one artwork is opened and closed
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several times, each time starting a new trace. I then assigned all the
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following move events to the trace beforehand. This is, of course,
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arbitrary and could also be handled the other way around.
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Another possibility is, that an artwork gets moved within one trace without
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being flipped. I then assigned a new trace to this move.
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This overall worked very well even though it was based on the very
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heuristic approach assigning a case when the table has not been touched for
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20 seconds. It should be kept in mind that the trace assignments for the
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moves will change when case is defined in a different way.
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## A `move` event does not record any change
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Most of the events in the log files are move events. Additionally, many of
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these move events are recorded but they do not indicate any change meaning
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the only difference is the time stamp. All other variables indicating moves
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like `x.start` and `x.stop`, `rotation.start` and `rotation.stop` etc. do
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not show any change. They represent about 2/3 of all move events. These
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events are probably short touches of the table without an actual
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interaction. They were therefore removed from the data set.
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## Events that only close (`date.start` is NA)
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It looks like there is some kind of log error for the events that do not
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have a start stop. I was able to get rid of most by sorting for `popup` for
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the openPopup events, but there are still some left (50 for the small data
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set, which corresponds to 0.2 per mill). The following example shows that
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artwork "501" gets closed (line 31030) while the pop-up `sommerbau.xml`
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is still opened (line 31027). Then artwork "501" gets opened again
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(line 31035) and after that the pop-up `sommerbau.xml` is closed (line
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31040). This should not be possible and therefore (correctly) two events
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are assigned: One where the pop-up was opened and then not closed (which is
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common) and another one where the pop-up has no start.
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```{r}
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dat[31000:31019,]
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# Card gets flipped closed before pop-up closes --> log error!
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```
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I did not check all of these cases (for the complete data set this is
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simply not possible by hand) but just excluded all events that do not have
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a `date.start` since they are hard to interpret. Often they are log errors
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but in some cases they might be resolvable.
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```{r}
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# remove all events that do not have a `date.start`
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dim(dat2[is.na(dat2$date.start), ])
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dat2 <- dat2[!is.na(dat2$date.start), ]
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```
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## Card indices go from 0 to 7 (instead of 0 to 5 as expected)
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|
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|
See `questions_number-of-cards.R` for more details.
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|
|
|
I wrote a function that for each artwork extracts the file names of the
|
|
possible topic cards and then looks up which topics have actually been
|
|
displayed on the back of the card. I added an index giving the ordering in
|
|
the index files.
|
|
|
|
The possible values in the variable `topicNumber` range from 0 to 7,
|
|
however, not artwork has more than six different numbers. So I just renamed
|
|
those numbers from 1 to the highest number, e.g., $0,1,2,4,5,6$ was changed
|
|
to $0\to 1,1\to 2,2\to 3,4\to 4,5\to 5,6\to 6$. Next I used the index to
|
|
assign topics and file names to the according pop-ups. This needs to be
|
|
cross checked with the programming, but seems the most plausible approach
|
|
with my current knowledge.
|
|
|
|
## Extracting topics from `index.xml` vs. `<artwork_number>.xml`
|
|
|
|
When I extract the topics from `index.html` I get different topics, than
|
|
when I get them from `<artwork>.html`. At first glance, it looks like using
|
|
`index.html` actually gives the wrong results.
|
|
|
|
```{r}
|
|
artworks <- unique(dat2$artwork)
|
|
path <- "data/haum/ContentEyevisit/eyevisit_cards_light/"
|
|
topics <- extract_topics(artworks, rep("index.xml", length(artworks)), path)
|
|
topics2 <- extract_topics(artworks, paste0(artworks, ".xml"), path)
|
|
|
|
topics[!topics$file_name %in% topics2$file_name, ]
|
|
topics2[!topics2$file_name %in% topics$file_name, ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
For artwork "031", `index.html` only defines 5 cards (the 6th is commented
|
|
out), but `topicNumber` for this artwork has 6 different entries. I will
|
|
therefore extract the topics from `<artwork>.html`. (This seems also better
|
|
compatible with other data sets like 8o8m.)
|
|
|
|
## New artworks "504" and "505" starting October 2022
|
|
|
|
When I read in the complete data frame for the first time, all of the
|
|
sudden there were 72 instead of 70 artworks. It seems like these two
|
|
artworks appear on October 21, 2022.
|
|
|
|
```{r}
|
|
dat0 <- read.table("data/haum/raw_logfiles_2023-09-23_01-31-30.csv",
|
|
sep = ";", header = TRUE)
|
|
dat0$date <- as.POSIXct(dat0$date)
|
|
dat0$glossar <- ifelse(dat0$artwork == "glossar", 1, 0)
|
|
|
|
# Remove irrelevant events
|
|
dat <- subset(dat0, !(dat0$event %in% c("Start Application",
|
|
"Show Application")))
|
|
|
|
summary(dat[dat$artwork %in% c("504", "505"), ])
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The artworks seem to be have updated in general after October 21, 2022.
|
|
|
|
```{r}
|
|
art_after_oct2022 <- sort(unique(dat[dat$date >= "2022-10-21", "artwork"]))
|
|
art_before_oct2022 <- sort(unique(dat[dat$date <= "2022-10-21", "artwork"]))
|
|
# Removed artworks
|
|
art_before_oct2022[!art_before_oct2022 %in% art_after_oct2022]
|
|
# Additional artworks
|
|
art_after_oct2022[!art_after_oct2022 %in% art_before_oct2022]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The following table shows which artworks were presented in which years.
|
|
|
|
```{r}
|
|
xtabs(~ artwork + lubridate::year(date), dat)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
It strongly suggests that the artworks haven been updated after the Corona
|
|
pandemic. I think, the table was also moved to a different location at that
|
|
point. (Check with PG to make sure.)
|
|
|
|
I need to get the XML files for "504" and "505" from PM in order to extract
|
|
information on them for the metadata.
|
|
|
|
# Optimizing resources used by the code
|
|
|
|
After I started trying out the functions on the complete data set, it
|
|
became obvious (not surprisingly `:)`) that this will not work --
|
|
especially for the move events. The reshape function cannot take a long
|
|
data frame with over 6 Million entries and convert it into a wide data
|
|
frame (at least not on my laptop). The code is supposed to work "out of the
|
|
box" for researchers, hence it *should* run on a regular (8 core) laptop.
|
|
So, I changed the reshaping so that it is done in batches on subsets of the
|
|
data for every `fileId` separately. This means that events that span over
|
|
two raw log files cannot be closed and will then be removed from the data
|
|
set. The functions warns about this, but it is a random process getting rid
|
|
of these data and seems therefore not like a systematic problem. Another
|
|
reason why this is not bad, is that durations cannot be calculated for
|
|
events across log files anyways, because the time stamps do not increase
|
|
systematically over log files (see above).
|
|
|
|
I meant to put the lists back together with `do.call(rbind, some_list)` but
|
|
this can also not handle big data sets. I therefore switched to
|
|
`dplyr::bind_rows(some_ist)` which is really fast and was developed
|
|
especially for this purpose. It means, that I have to depend on the dplyr
|
|
package (which I am not a big fan of, since I meant to keep the package
|
|
self-contained).
|
|
|
|
# Reading list
|
|
|
|
* @Arizmendi2022 [--]
|
|
* @Bannert2014 [x]
|
|
* @Bousbia2010 [--]
|
|
* @Cerezo2020
|
|
* @GerjetsSchwan2021 [x]
|
|
* @Goldhammer2020
|
|
* @Guenther2007
|
|
* @HuberBannert2023 [x]
|
|
* @Kroehne2018
|
|
* @SchwanGerjets2021 [x]
|
|
* @vanderAalst2016 [Chap. 2, x]
|
|
* @vanderAalst2016 [Chap. 3]
|
|
* @vanderAalst2016 [Chap. 5, x]
|
|
* @Wang2019
|
|
|
|
# Open stuff
|
|
|
|
* Angle from which people approach table in Braunschweig? Consider in
|
|
rotation variable?
|
|
* Time limit for `case` variable different for different events? (openTopic
|
|
should be opened the longest)
|
|
|
|
$\to$ I think this is not relevant since I am looking at time *between*
|
|
events!
|
|
|
|
# Stuff AK found interesting
|
|
|
|
* Pre/post corona
|
|
* Identify school classes
|
|
* How many persons are present at the table?
|
|
|
|
# Other potential questions
|
|
|
|
* "Bursts"
|
|
* 1st vs. 2nd half of the day
|
|
* Can we identify "types of art"? With clustering or something?
|
|
* Possible to estimate how many persons per day? Maybe average of certain
|
|
weekdays? ... ?
|
|
|