with the Wikidata Query Service; accordingly, information is updated in Scholia as items in Wikidata are added and enhanced. Scholia provides examples and a menu on the top to browse possible profiles. The profile of Anais do Museu Paulista may be found at https://scholia.toolforge. org/venue/Q50426299. Other bibliographic elements may be explored by changing the QID (“Q50426299”) at the end of the previous URL.
Figure 8 The coauthor graph—here, a fragment from Anais do Museu Paulista—is an output of the Scholia tool for publications. Available at https://w.wiki/XEw.
Conclusion
The process laid out in this chapter demonstrates a strategy for how to democratize the contribution of scholarly literature to Wikidata and to facilitate the diversity of cultural and regional origin of the literature that is contributed to the project. We relied on Zotero and a set of Wikidata tools to provide a large-scale body of article indexing from the Anais do Museu Paulista, a scholarly journal of the Museu do Ipiranga. Our case study and related guidelines seek to motivate and illustrate the inclusion of bibliographic literature from the Global South without an advanced skill set, an information-heavy technology,