Yay! Very cool to see this :)
Heather Ford
Oxford Internet Institute <http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk> Doctoral Programme
EthnographyMatters <http://ethnographymatters.net> | Oxford Digital
Ethnography Group <http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115>
| @hfordsa <http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa>
On 26 February 2014 23:43, Samuel Klein <meta.sj(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you for these showcases, they are great.
I'm a fan of using
session data as a baseline metric; kudos to Oliver for this work.
Is there a catalog of all data that could possibly be available (for
instance, the mw.session cookie), along with where it is logged, for
how long, and where in various toolchains it gets stripped out?
Related lists could be useful for planning:
* Limitations our privacy policies place on data gathering (handy when
reviewing those policies)
* Studies that are easy and hard given the types of data we gather
* Wishlists (from external researchers, and from internal staff) of
data-sets that would be useful but aren't currently available. Along
with a sense of priority, complexity, cost.
On Tue, Feb 25, 2014 at 9:06 PM, Dario Taraborelli
<dtaraborelli(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Starting tomorrow (February 26), we will be
broadcasting the monthly
showcase of the Wikimedia Research and Data team.
The showcase is an opportunity to present and discuss recent work
researchers at the Foundation have been conducting. The showcase will
start
at 11.30 Pacific Time and we will post a link to
the stream a few minutes
before it starts. You can also join the conversation on the
#wikimedia-office IRC channel on freenode (we'll be sticking around after
the end of the showcase to answer any question).
This month, we'll be talking about Wikipedia mobile readers and article
creation trends:
Oliver Keyes
Mobile session times
A prerequisite to many pieces of interesting reader research is being
able
to accurately identify the length of users'
'sessions'. I will explain
one
potential way of doing it, how I've applied
it to mobile readers, and
what
research this opens up. (20 mins)
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Mobile_sessions
Aaron Halfaker
Wikipedia article creation research
I'll present research examining trends in newcomer article creation
across
10 languages with a focus on English and German
Wikipedias. I'll show
that, in wikis where anonymous users can create articles, their articles
are
less likely to be deleted than articles created
by newly registered
editors.
I'll also show the results of an in-depth
analysis of Articles for
Creation
(AfC) which suggest that while AfC's process
seems to result in the
publication of high quality articles, it also dramatically reduces the
rate
at which good new articles are published. (30
mins)
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Wikipedia_article_creation
Looking forward to seeing you all tomorrow!
Dario
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Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
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