The Research Showcase will be starting in about 30 minutes. 

On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 2:37 PM Janna Layton <jlayton@wikimedia.org> wrote:

Hello all,


In this month’s showcase, we have two presentations on the importance and value of Wikipedia outside of Wikipedia. In the first talk, Nick Vincent will present results on the importance of Wikipedia for search engines in which they looked how often and where Wikipedia links appeared in search results of Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, etc. In the second talk, Tiziano Piccardi will present a recent study on the value of Wikipedia’s links to external websites by quantifying the amount of traffic generated by those links and analyzing for which types of articles Wikipedia acts as a stepping stone to the intended destination.


Time/date: May 19, 16:30 UTC (9:30am PT/ 12:30pm ET/ 18:30pm CET)

Youtube-link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoX5rFNzkXs



Talk 1

Speaker: Nick Vincent (Northwestern University, USA)

Title: The Importance of Wikipedia to Search Engines and Other Systems

Abstract: A growing body of work has highlighted the important role that Wikipedia’s volunteer-created content plays in helping search engines achieve their core goal of addressing the information needs of hundreds of millions of people. In this talk, I will discuss a recent study looking at how often, and where, Wikipedia links appear in search engine results. In this study, we found that Wikipedia links appeared prominently and frequently in Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo results, though less often for searches from a mobile device. I will connect this study to past work looking at the value of Wikipedia links to other online platforms, and to ongoing discussions around Wikipedia's value as a training source for modern AI.

Related paper:


Talk 2

Speaker: Tiziano Piccardi (EPFL, Switzerland)

Title: On the Value of Wikipedia as a Gateway to the Web

Abstract: By linking to external websites, Wikipedia can act as a gateway to the Web. However, little is known about the amount of traffic generated by Wikipedia's external links. We fill this gap in a detailed analysis of usage logs gathered from Wikipedia users' client devices. We discovered that in one month, English Wikipedia generated 43M clicks to external websites, with the highest click-through rate on the official links listed in the infoboxes. Our analysis highlights that the articles about businesses, educational institutions, and websites show the highest engagement, and for some content, Wikipedia act as a stepping stone to the intended destination. We conclude our analysis by quantifying the hypothetical economic value of the clicks received by external websites. We estimate that the respective website owners would need to pay a total of $7--13 million per month to obtain the same volume of traffic via sponsored search. These findings shed light on Wikipedia's role not only as an important source of information but also as a high-traffic gateway to the broader Web ecosystem.

Related paper:


--
Janna Layton (she/her)
Administrative Associate - Product & Technology 


--
Janna Layton (she/her)
Administrative Associate - Product & Technology