(reposting from the WMF blog:
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2011/07/12/introducing-the-wikimedia-research-ind… )
For a long time resources for researchers and information about research of Wikimedia
projects have been incomplete, unmaintained and scattered. Support for researchers from
the Foundation has been ad-hoc and there hasn’t been a team in charge of reviewing
external support requests or to facilitate collaboration with external researchers. To
answer to these problems the Research Committee recently started to rebuild the research
documentation available on Meta. Today we are proud to announce the first version of the
Wikimedia Research Index, the single go-to point for all research-related needs at
Wikimedia.
The main purpose of a research index is to centralize documentation on research of
Wikimedia projects, but also to create a place for the community to discuss and learn
about this research. The Wikimedia Research Index will:
provide documentation on resources for Wikimedia researchers, including datasets, tools
and code libraries, conferences and events
act as a point of contact for researchers with each other and the Foundation (by
complementing wiki-research-l)
formalize support for research projects and specify what the Foundation expects from the
projects it supports
host research policies and guidelines
track research projects (both initiated by the Foundation and by the research community)
that study Wikimedia contents and communities or that build innovative results and
applications on top of Wikimedia data
These are some highlights from the Research Index:
we have been working on a set of policies to ensure that research supported in different
forms by the Foundation isreleased in the open (with respect not only to its output, but
also to code and data). The new open access/open data policy of the Foundation will be
announced in a separate post.
as part of this work, we will be announcing soon the first in a series of monthly research
newsletters covering the most recent updates in Wikimedia research, modeled around the
Signpost
we will be highlighting via the Research Index, the Foundation’s blog and the research
newsletter a series of featured projects that touch on issues of particular strategic
importance. The first featured project is the Wikimedia Summer of Research, hosted by WMF
Community department
we created a dedicated IRC channel on Freenode as a friendly place to discuss in real time
issues of relevance to Wikimedia research
The Research Index is, by definition, a constant work in progress and there are several
ways in which you can help us improve it: as a researcher, by making sure that your past
and current projects are documented in the research project directory and by bringing to
our attention to any results, calls for papers and research-related initiatives we should
be aware of (particularly if you wish to have them included in the research newsletter);
as a community member by participating in project-specific discussions, by highlighting
issues that are particularly sensitive from a community perspective and by suggesting
topics and issues in search of an answer from the research community.
We hope with this initiative to increase the volume, speed, impact and potential audience
of research that helps improve our understanding of Wikimedia projects and communities.
Dario
--
Dario Taraborelli, PhD
Senior Research Analyst
Wikimedia Foundation
http://wikimediafoundation.org
http://nitens.org/taraborelli