Hey there, Anna, 

In case you mean searching your cohort across multiple projects, you can also expand your cohort list to get a report on your cohort's global participation across projects by selecting that option in the cohort upload screen.

Thanks,

Jaime

-- 

Jaime Anstee, Ph.D
Program Evaluation Specialist
Wikimedia Foundation
+1.415.839.6885 ext 6869
www.wikimediafoundation.org

Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. Help us make it a reality!


On Tue, Mar 10, 2015 at 10:45 AM, Nuria Ruiz <nuria@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Anna:

"Rolling surviving active editors" is a metric better taylored for monthly computations, details are here: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Rolling_surviving_new_active_editor

"survival" details are here: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Metrics/survival(t)

To get started, survival might be more intuitive to understand.


> As well, any help regarding how to see the contributions to other projects apart of Wikipedia?
When you create a report you can select the project you are interested on. You also would need a cohort on that project. Meaning that if you want to get results for, say, "arwiki" you need a group of editor usernames (or ids) in "arwiki".

Thanks, 

Nuria




On Tue, Mar 10, 2015 at 9:28 AM, Anna Torres <de@wikimedia.org.ar> wrote:
Dear all, 

Im reporting WMAR programs with Wikimetrics. Anybody can explain me whats the difference between rolling surviving new active editors and survival? As well, any help regarding how to see the contributions to other projects apart of Wikipedia?

Thanks!!! hugs

--
Anna Torres Adell
Directora Ejecutiva
A.C. Wikimedia Argentina

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