Dear Amy,
That's an interesting topic, for your database you might want to just filter your
dataset for some outliers that start and close on the first of April broadly construed (it
is more than forty hours from when April Fools day starts in New Zealand to when it ends
in California).
Regards
Jonathan
On 31 May 2017, at 20:40, Amy Zhang
<axz(a)mit.edu> wrote:
Hi all,
We are preparing to conduct some research into the process of how Requests
for Comments (RfCs) get discussed and closed. This work is further
described in the following Wikimedia page:
https://meta.wikimedia.o
rg/wiki/Research:Discussion_summarization_and_decision_support_with_Wikum
To begin, we are planning to do a round of interviews with people who
participate in RfCs in English Wikipedia, including frequent closers,
infrequent closers, and people who participate in but don't close RfCs. We
will be asking them about how they go about closing RfCs and their opinions
on how the overall process could be improved. We are also creating a
database of all the RfCs on English Wikipedia that have gone through a
formal closure process and parsing their conversations.
While planning the interviews, we thought that the information that we
gather could be of interest to the Wikimedia community, so we wanted to
open it up and ask if there was anything you would be interested in
learning about RfCs or RfC closure from people who participate in them.
Also, if you know of existing work in this area, please let us know.
Thank you!
Amy
--
Amy X. Zhang | Ph.D. student at MIT CSAIL |
http://people.csail.mit.edu/axz
| @amyxzh
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