Samson Yuxiu Lai

User:SamsonLai /

Hello, you've found the user page for Samson Y. Lai (aka ORCID user 0000-0002-8227-3250).

I am the Group Leader for Materials Development at the Institute for Energy Technology (IFE) in Norway. I am also coordinator of the SALAMANDER Horizon Europe Project, a part of the Battery 2030+ CSA. The SALAMANDER project has its own project page on the Battery Knowledge Base.

My technical expertise is/was in silicon anodes and characterization methods. Nowadays, I mostly do project management, supervision, and mentoring.

Some of my collaborators below are also here on the wiki:

  • Dr. Inger-Emma Nylund Inger-Emma Nylund
  • Dr. Nienke Visser
  • Dr. David Wragg
  • Theresa Nguyen
  • Tommy Nordby

Pleased to meet you and feel free to contact me on LinkedIn if you have any questions.

Task list

Here is a list of sections and areas I am working on:

  • New user guide to editing the Battery wiki
  • Create a manual of style for BatteryKB.
  • Update the Main Page for BatteryKB.
  • Create a community task list to organize effort and comprehensively curate specific content.
  • Create templates to make content curation more efficient.
  • Make the info box narrower, hide the "machine-readable" relevant content inside the wiki text as comments
  • Fix the TOC being out of order (Abstract on SALAMANDER page is at the bottom).
  • Fix why [[ isn't easily finding SALAMANDER project page

How-to

How to change your user page from your ORCID:
  1. Click on the three dots on the right-hand side of the page.
  2. Click on Move Page.
  3. Enter the desired name of your user name.
  4. Click Move page.
  5. Finished!
  6. Note: the old page will still exist, but will simply redirect to the new page.
  7. Note: if you make a mistake, you can undo the move. Either move the page back or go the history of the page and click Revert.
  8. Note: if you edit the user page, you will get a warning about editing a page for an account that doesn't exist.

How to make yourself a User entity in the Battery KB (not the same as above):

  1. Go to this page: User
  2. At the top, click + Create.
  3. Fill in the parameters where relevant and required.
  4. Save your entity and starting using it! You can now essentially tag or define yourself in relation to other objects. For example, try finding your Battery 2030+ project and adding yourself as a Member to that project.

How to add your User entity to a project:

  1. Find your project. You can use search or this Category: Project
  2. Click on that Project's name to find their entity page.
  3. At the top, there are two edit buttons: Edit data and Edit.
    1. Edit data: this allows you to modify the parameters of the project entity. Essentially, it allows you to update the project's relationship to other objects, such as you being a member of the project.
    2. Edit: this allows you to modify the information displayed on the project's entity page.
  4. Click on Edit data and scroll down to find the Member info box.
  5. Click the + sign to add a new node.
  6. Type in your name in the search box and click on the right entry from the search suggestions.
    1. Troubleshooting: if you can't find your name, that means you didn't create yourself as a User entity first. You need to do that before adding yourself to a project. No, you cannot simply type in your name for now.
  7. Click Save.
  8. Finished! Note: it may take some time for the changes are reflected on the page. You can try refreshing and purging the cache by using Shift+F5.
  9. Next steps: notice anything that you couldn't add to your User entity parameters because the objects didn't already exist? Go to those Categories and start creating those entities. For example, you can check for whether the BatteryKB already has your institution as an Organization entity here:Organization
  10. Next steps: improve the quality of your User entity. Here is an example a good quality User entity: Simon Clark.

How to make a link:

There's two types of links. wiki links and external links.

  1. A good wiki links relevant terms to their respective pages elsewhere in the wiki.
    1. Type the text you want to link.
    2. Highlight that text and click the Link button at the top in visual editor to open a dialog box. Search for the linked page.
    3. Click save on the dialog box, then Save Changes on the page to finalize the link.
    4. You can also do this by typing [[ and then using the pop-up dialog box. (This method doesn't seem to work at present.)
  2. External links can also be included by using the button on the visual editor, or Ctrl+K. Enter the full URL in the text box that shows up.

How to help:

  1. If you've never edited Wikipedia before or worked on any other kind of wiki, reading the introduction and basic five pillars of this page are extremely helpful to understanding what a successful wiki culture requires: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:A_primer_for_newcomers.
  2. In essence, Wikipedia has already developed processes and procedures that solve a lot of common problems and the BatteryKB doesn't need to reinvent the wheel (at least, completely).
  3. One of the best aspects about wikis in general is that you can learn nearly everything by simply copying what you see in a good page. However, this is more difficult in the BatteryKB due to how its ontological structuring.
  4. If you have worked on Wikipedia or another wiki, you will find that the BatteryKB operates differently. This is because the BatteryKB is built fundamentally on an ontological infrastructure. This means essentially that everything is classified as a categorical object with defined relationships to other objects, and nothing should exist outside of this framework.
  5. That means, compared to other wikis where you might simply create a page by writing on a blank slate and then link it to other places, you first instead go the category to which that object would belong and create it from there along with defining some of its necessary traits.
    1. Example: if I wanted to create a page for myself in Wikipedia, I would create an article called Samson Y. Lai, and then write my biography and click Save. However, unless another Wikipedia article links to my article or vice versa, my article would essentially be orphaned and difficult to find except by explicit search. A person or bot editor would also later need to manually add Categories, such as "Person" and "Scientist" and "American", which can be difficult to assign or define after the fact.
    2. Conversely, in the BatteryKB, to make a page or rather "entity/object" which represents me, I go the the pre-existing Category called "Users" and create a new User. This User object has pre-defined parameters, such as name, role, location, and relevant relationships to other objects (e.g., Institutional Affiliation). In this way, the parameters are consistently used by all objects (no issues of "Person" vs. "Persons" vs. "person", etc.) and thus, these parameters are usable and readable by machines. This also prevents orphan articles.
    3. This approach also applies to any other new entry: first find the category that object would belong to, then create it under that category and fill in the important parameters.
    4. For advanced users: some relationship parameters are pre-defined, but it is possible to add new parameters to a whole category. This should be done in consultation with those involved with curating the ontological infrastructure so as to be consistent and organized.
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