De: Jodi Schneider jschneider@pobox.com Para: Research into Wikimedia content and communities wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org Enviado: Martes 30 de octubre de 2012 19:29 Asunto: Re: [Wiki-research-l] War of 1812 and all that
GA is not necessarily like other articles. Among other things, more knowledge of process and more task-focused collaboration are probably typical (any evidence of that?).
For the German WP, there is solid research on FA, concluding that "We explore on the German Wikipedia whether only the mere number of contributors makes the difference or whether the high quality of featured articles results from having experienced authors contributing with a reputation for high quality contributions. Our results indicate that it does matter who contributes."
Stein, K., & Hess, C. (2007). Does it matter who contributes: A study on featured articles in the German Wikipedia. In HT '07: Proceedings of the eighteenth conference on hypertext and hypermedia (pp. 171-174). ACM. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1286240.128629
And using the same method from Stein & Hess, we can draw similar conclusions for all the largest Wikipedias, specially in the case of English.
http://felipeortega.net/sites/default/files/thesis-jfelipe.pdf (see section 4.5, starting on page 129).
Best, Felipe.
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 6:04 PM, Piotr Konieczny piokon@post.pl wrote:
Well, this is based on my experience as GA author and reviewer. I have never seen an IP successfully nominate an article (I did see nominations once or twice, they failed quickly, as the articles were not up to GA level and IP never came back). And of course, I have yet to see an IP GA reviewer (that is not a troll or a useless if good faithed newbie). If you are aware of any successful GANs were the primary author was an IP, I'd like to look at them. I'd hypothesize that:
- they are a tiny percentage of the whole (if we have more than a
10 GAs written by anons in our pool of 15,000 or so, I'd be very surprised; if more than 100 I am willing to eat a hat, or more constructively, I'll write a DYK (if possible) on a subject of your choice :D);
- majority of anon-written GAs are old, have been already
delisted, or would not pass a modern GA review (and if nominated for a current GA review, would fail, due to not meeting criteria and the primary author being unreachable to address the issues raised).
--
Piotr Konieczny "To be defeated and not submit, is victory; to be victorious and rest on one's laurels, is defeat." --Józef Pilsudski
On 10/29/2012 4:30 PM, Laura Hale wrote:
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 7:19 AM, Piotr Konieczny piokon@post.pl wrote:
Anonymous or low activity editors can contribute high quality content, certainly, but quantity (and by extrapolation, most quality) comes from registered ones.
(Case in point: no GA or FA can be written by an anon, or a
SPE; and most of the primary contributors to those articles likely have many high quality edits to a large number of other articles).
What is this based on? I've seen a number of articles written by
IP addresses that have been GA quality articles. Anyone can nominate a GA. (I could have nominated them for instance.) Rules may prohibit their nomination at FA, but rules at GA do not prohibit articles primarily written by IP addresses from being nominated.
-- twitter: purplepopple blog: ozziesport.com
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