you should also check out:
Laniado, David, Riccardo Tasso, Y. Volkovich, and Andreas Kaltenbrunner. When the
Wikipedians talk: network and tree structure of Wikipedia discussion pages. In Proceedings
of the Fifth International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM '11),
177-184, 2011.
There's a good amount of research
Jullien 2012 has an excellent (although by no means exhaustive) lit review of extant
Wikipedia research including many network analysis papers:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2053597
Welser, et al. 2011 use network analysis approaches to identify and differentiate users
social roles:
http://www.connectedaction.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Welser.Cosley.plu…
Antin, et al. 2012 use some centrality-like metrics to measure the diversity of editing
behavior:
http://faculty.poly.edu/~onov/Antin_Chehsire_Nov_WPP_CSCW_2012.pdf
Kane 2009 on how network position influences article quality:
http://www.profkane.com/uploads/7/9/1/3/79137/kane_2009_ocisa.pdf
Kane, et al. 2012 on how membership turnover/retention influences article quality:
http://www.samransbotham.com/sites/default/files/RansbothamKane_WikiDemotio…
<shameless self promotion>
Descriptive analysis of Wikipedia's response and networks to the 2011 Tohoku
earthquake and tsunami:
http://www.brianckeegan.com/papers/WikiSym11.pdf
Developing a statistical model of whether Wikipedia collaborations as a bipartite network
of editors and authors are more strongly influenced by features of editors or features of
articles:
http://www.brianckeegan.com/papers/CSCW12.pdf
Developing a unipartite network of Wikipedia collaborations as "document
passing" network among editors on a single article:
http://www.brianckeegan.com/papers/WikiSym12.pdf
On Wed, Sep 5, 2012 at 7:43 PM, Jeremy Foote <foote0(a)purdue.edu> wrote:
I am a brand new Master's student at Purdue. For my Social Network Analysis class,
I'm thinking about doing a project about whether a Wikipedian's centrality in a
network can be used as a predictor of future participation. I've spent the afternoon
looking for relevant literature. I found the very interesting
"Validity Issues in the Use of Social Network Analysis with Digital Trace Data"
by Howison, Wiggins, and Crowston
and
"Network analysis of collaboration structure in Wikipedia" by Brandes et al.
I'm wondering if there are other papers about how to translate Wikipedia into a
network structure, or even more specifically relating to node-level centrality measures
and participation measures.
Very many thanks,
Jeremy Foote
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Brian C. Keegan
Ph.D. Student - Media, Technology, & Society
School of Communication, Northwestern University
Science of Networks in Communities, Laboratory for Collaborative Technology
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