[Foundation-l] Subject: Re: The 'Undue Weight' of Truth on Wikipedia, (from the Chronicle) + some citation discussions
Robin McCain
robin at slmr.com
Thu Feb 23 02:41:13 UTC 2012
Well, I'm not an active academic, but I have been given to understand
that the quality of the peer review process varies greatly. About 10
years back, I was briefly involved in an attempt to develop an online
peer reviewed publications infrastructure. This was one of our concerns
- is it better to have 10 second tier subject matter experts vote on
whether or not to publish an article or rely solely on the opinion of
one first tier expert (who might bitterly detest the author of the work
under scrutiny for reasons not at all connected with the quality of the
article). Perhaps a better choice for people with subject matter
expertise would be graduate students who have no axe to grind as yet.
It is the same old question of "who will watch the watchers" that has
plagued every encyclopedic attempt in history.
So I'd rather have a qualified subject matter *generalist* review for
content than someone who is a /specialist/ with completely _unrelated_
credentials. The generalist probably knows enough about the field in
question to be able to spot inappropriate content than someone who has
an inflated ego but knows nothing of the subject.
We strive for inclusiveness, but the Wikipedia US culture has become
very exclusionary. Since this is a volunteer effort there is an attitude
of "take what you can get" that leads to sloppy behaviors. It seems we
need more effective and accessible training for everyone from readers to
contributors and editors. There may be some such, but I haven't stumbled
across it yet.
Is there already a core of training material that could be converted
into some kind of online interactive instructional tool?
On 2/22/2012 6:04 PM, David Goodman wrote:
> I was one of the initial subject editors at Citizendium. One of its
> key problems was the poor choice of subject matter experts. The
> selection of which people to trust was ultimately in the hands of the
> founder, and he was unduly impressed by formal academic credentials
> without concerning himself about actual professional standing. But
> even had he a much closer understanding of the actual hierarchies in
> the academic world, the results would not have been much better,
> because there is nobody of sufficient knowledge and authority across
> the fields of all of human activity to select the true experts.
>
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