🌻 Focus or exclude factors#

22 Sep 2025

Summary#

This extension is about using factor labels to carve out a useful subgraph of your causal map:

Unlike label-rewrite transforms (collapse synonyms, remove bracket text, zoom hierarchies, combine opposites), focusing/excluding does not rename factors. It decides which parts of the existing graph you want to see and analyse.

Focusing as neighbourhood extraction (not “just filtering factors”)#

Focusing helps you understand a factor as both an outcome (what leads to it?) and an influence (what follows from it?), without having to interpret the entire map at once.

focus.png

Let \(F\) be the set of focused factor labels.

The intended definition is link-based (not factor-based):

In interview-style data, causal chains longer than ~4 steps are uncommon; choosing \(U,D\) is therefore a modelling assumption about how far a “story” typically extends.

Matching is label-based#

Focusing operates on factor labels, not on an ontology:

“Source tracing” as a conservative interpretation#

Sometimes you want paths that reflect single-source narratives rather than a composite chain stitched together across sources.

In source tracing mode, a factor/link is only kept if there exists at least one path satisfying the upstream/downstream rule where every link segment comes from the same source.

Order matters#

If you apply label-rewrite transforms earlier in your pipeline (collapse, zoom, remove brackets, combine opposites), then focus targets are interpreted in terms of the rewritten labels produced by those transforms. Conceptually: you are focusing on the map after those normalisations.

Excluding factors (the complementary operation)#

Excluding is subtractive: you specify factor-label patterns, and any factor that matches is removed, along with any links incident to it (as cause or effect).

In the current app, exclusion terms within a single exclude-filter are combined with AND; if you want to exclude two different terms independently, you use two exclude filters.

Relationship to “collapse” (different goal)#