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Terminology

DataJoint introduces a principled data model, which is described in detail in Yatsenko et al., 2018. This data model is a conceptual refinement of the Relational Data Model and also draws on the Entity-Relationship Model (ERM).

The Relational Data Model was inspired by the concepts of relations in Set Theory. When the formal relational data model was formulated, it introduced additional terminology (e.g. relation, attribute, tuple, domain). Practical programming languages such as SQL do not precisely follow the relational data model and introduce other terms to approximate relational concepts (e.g. table, column, row, datatype). Subsequent data models (e.g. ERM) refined the relational data model and introduced their own terminology to describe analogous concepts (e.g. entity set, relationship set, attribute set). As a result, similar concepts may be described using different sets of terminologies, depending on the context and the speaker's background.

For example, what is known as a relation in the formal relational model is called a table in SQL; the analogous concept in ERM and DataJoint is called an entity set.

The DataJoint documentation follows the terminology defined in Yatsenko et al, 2018, except entity set is replaced with the more colloquial table or query result in most cases.

The table below summarizes the terms used for similar concepts across the related data models.

Data model terminology | Relational | ERM | SQL | DataJoint (formal) | This manual | | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | | relation | entity set | table | entity set | table | | tuple | entity | row | entity | entity | | domain | value set | datatype | datatype | datatype | | attribute | attribute | column | attribute | attribute | | attribute value | attribute value | field value | attribute value | attribute value | | primary key | primary key | primary key | primary key | primary key | | foreign key | foreign key | foreign key | foreign key | foreign key | | schema | schema | schema or database | schema | schema | | relational expression | data query | SELECT statement | query expression | query expression |

DataJoint: databases, schemas, packages, and modules

A database is collection of tables on the database server. DataJoint users do not interact with it directly.

A DataJoint schema is

- a database on the database server containing tables with data and - a collection of classes (in MATLAB or Python) associated with the database, one class for each table.

In MATLAB, the collection of classes is organized as a package, i.e. a file folder starting with a +.

In Python, the collection of classes is any set of classes decorated with the appropriate schema object. Very commonly classes for tables in one database are organized as a distinct Python module. Thus, typical DataJoint projects have one module per database. However, this organization is up to the user's discretion.

Base tables

Base tables are tables stored in the database, and are often referred to simply as tables in DataJoint. Base tables are distinguished from derived tables, which result from relational operators.

Relvars and relation values

Early versions of the DataJoint documentation referred to the relation objects as relvars. This term emphasizes the fact that relational variables and expressions do not contain actual data but are rather symbolic representations of data to be retrieved from the database. The specific value of a relvar would then be referred to as the relation value. The value of a relvar can change with changes in the state of the database.

The more recent iteration of the documentation has grown less pedantic and more often uses the term table instead.

Metadata

The vocabulary of DataJoint does not include this term.

In data science, the term metadata commonly means "data about the data" rather than the data themselves. For example, metadata could include data sizes, timestamps, data types, indexes, keywords.

In contrast, neuroscientists often use the term to refer to conditions and annotations about experiments. This distinction arose when such information was stored separately from experimental recordings, such as in physical notebooks. Such "metadata" are used to search and to classify the data and are in fact an integral part of the actual data.

In DataJoint, all data other than blobs can be used in searches and categorization. These fields may originate from manual annotations, preprocessing, or analyses just as easily as from recordings or behavioral performance. Since "metadata" in the neuroscience sense are not distinguished from any other data in a pipeline, DataJoint avoids the term entirely. Instead, DataJoint differentiates data into data tiers.

Glossary

We've taken careful consideration to use consistent terminology.

Term Definition
DAG directed acyclic graph (DAG) is a set of nodes and connected with a set of directed edges that form no cycles. This means that there is never a path back to a node after passing through it by following the directed edges. Formal workflow management systems represent workflows in the form of DAGs.
data pipeline A sequence of data transformation steps from data sources through multiple intermediate structures. More generally, a data pipeline is a directed acyclic graph. In DataJoint, each step is represented by a table in a relational database.
DataJoint a software framework for database programming directly from matlab and python. Thanks to its support of automated computational dependencies, DataJoint serves as a workflow management system.
DataJoint Elements software modules implementing portions of experiment workflows designed for ease of integration into diverse custom workflows.
DataJoint pipeline the data schemas and transformations underlying a DataJoint workflow. DataJoint allows defining code that specifies both the workflow and the data pipeline, and we have used the words "pipeline" and "workflow" almost interchangeably.
DataJoint schema a software module implementing a portion of an experiment workflow. Includes database table definitions, dependencies, and associated computations.
foreign key a field that is linked to another table's primary key.
primary key the subset of table attributes that uniquely identify each entity in the table.
secondray attribute any field in a table not in the primary key.
workflow a formal representation of the steps for executing an experiment from data collection to analysis. Also the software configured for performing these steps. A typical workflow is composed of tables with inter-dependencies and processes to compute and insert data into the tables.