[Apologies for cross-posting]
Hi everyone,
Almost a year ago, we [1] embarked on a research project to understand who
Wikipedia readers are. More specifically, we set a goal for finding a
taxonomy of Wikipedia readers. In the upcoming Research Showcase, I will
present the findings of this research.
*Logistics*
The Research Showcase will be live-streamed on Wednesday, November 16, 2016
at 11:35 (PST) 19:35 (UTC).
YouTube stream:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O24F1xkbNwI
As usual, you can join the conversation on IRC freedone at
#wikimedia-research. And, you can watch our past research showcases at
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Research/Showcase.
*Title*
Why We Read Wikipedia
*Abstract*
Every day, millions of readers come to Wikipedia to satisfy a broad range
of information needs, however, little is known about what these needs are.
In this presentation, I share the result of a research that sets to help us
understand Wikipedia readers better. Based on an initial user study on
English, Persian, and Spanish Wikipedia, we build a taxonomy of Wikipedia
use-cases along several dimensions, capturing users’ motivations to visit
Wikipedia, the depth of knowledge they are seeking, and their knowledge of
the topic of interest prior to visiting Wikipedia. Then, we quantify the
prevalence of these use-cases via a large-scale user survey conducted on
English Wikipedia. Our analyses highlight the variety of factors driving
users to Wikipedia, such as current events, media coverage of a topic,
personal curiosity, work or school assignments, or boredom. Finally, we
match survey responses to the respondents’ digital traces in Wikipedia’s
server logs, enabling the discovery of behavioral patterns associated with
specific use-cases. Our findings advance our understanding of reader
motivations and behavior on Wikipedia and have potential implications for
developers aiming to improve Wikipedia’s user experience, editors striving
to cater to (a subset of) their readers’ needs, third-party services (such
as search engines) providing access to Wikipedia content, and researchers
aiming to build tools such as article recommendation engines.
Looking forward to seeing you there, and if you can't make it, please feel
free to watch the video later and get in touch with us with
questions/comments. :)
Best,
Leila
--
Leila Zia
Senior Research Scientist
Wikimedia Foundation
[1] WMF Research and researchers from three academic institutions: EPFL,
GESIS, and Stanford University, in collaboration with WMF Reading.