I am applying for a summer student to do a Wikipedia
Medicine research
project through my department at UBC. One potentially project I am
looking
it is having them review all the edits made to Wikiproject Medicine
articles. The student will go through each edit and a) determine if the
edit is okay and revert it/fix it if it is not b) determine which edits
are
made from IP/new users verses long term edits c) calculate the percentage
of positive/negative edits from each group d) they will be going over
edits
from more than one day old thus we will be able to determine how good
Wikipedia is at repairing itself. I am thinking of collecting a weeks
worth
of edits.
While we have a list here
http://toolserver.org/~tim1357/cgi-bin/wikiproject_watchlist.py?template=Wi…
if multiple edits
are made to the same page in a single day it only shows the last one. Is
it
possible to get a list of all edits? If should be possible to work with
this list if another is not available.
For the first topic on that list click on "hist" and you'll get the
editing history for the article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Psychopathy&action=history
You can take that back, usually, to the first edit which created the
article.
This is a wonderful project. There is a study that 50% of doctors
sometimes consult Wikipedia and that 5% edit, probably the largest
percentage of any professional group; and you can't say they're not busy.
I suspect that ips in this area are more often responsible editors than
is usual, simply doctors who do not have an account.
Fred
If I am able to get approval and funding from UBC I am hoping to run a
second round collecting the same data but with "pending changes" turned
on
for a week on all medical articles. This students would be required to
handing all pending changes to all medical articles and will be
collecting
the same data as before. This will allow us to determine 1) if pending
changes affects the numbers of IPs editing 2) if and to what degree
pending
changes reduces the visibility of poor quality content. The proposed
student will be either between first and second year or second and third
year medicine and will be working 40 hours per week for 6-8 weeks during
the summer. If of course the last part of the project does not get
approval
I will still try to go ahead with the first part and will have the
student
join me on the "Medical Translation Project" as discussed here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:MED/Translation_project
--
James Heilman
MD, CCFP-EM, Wikipedian
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