Difference between revisions of "Annotating Social Acts: Authority Claims and Alignment Moves in Wikipedia Talk Pages"

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'''Annotating Social Acts: Authority Claims and Alignment Moves in Wikipedia Talk Pages''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2011, written by Emily M. Bender, Jonathan T. Morgan, Meghan Oxley, Mark Zachry, Brian Hutchinson, Alex Marin, Bin Zhang and Mari Ostendorf.
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'''Annotating Social Acts: Authority Claims and Alignment Moves in Wikipedia Talk Pages''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2011, written by [[Emily M. Bender]], [[Jonathan T. Morgan]], [[Meghan Oxley]], [[Mark Zachry]], [[Brian Hutchinson]], [[Alex Marin]], [[Bin Zhang]] and [[Mari Ostendorf]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Authors present the AAWD corpus, a collection of 365 discussions drawn from Wikipedia talk pages and annotated with labels capturing two kinds of social acts: alignment moves and authority claims. Authors describe these social acts and annotation process, and analyze the resulting data set for interactions between participant status and social acts and between the social acts themselves.
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Authors present the AAWD corpus, a collection of 365 discussions drawn from [[Wikipedia]] [[talk pages]] and annotated with labels capturing two kinds of social acts: alignment moves and authority claims. Authors describe these social acts and annotation process, and analyze the resulting data set for interactions between participant status and social acts and between the social acts themselves.

Revision as of 08:30, 6 August 2019

Annotating Social Acts: Authority Claims and Alignment Moves in Wikipedia Talk Pages - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2011, written by Emily M. Bender, Jonathan T. Morgan, Meghan Oxley, Mark Zachry, Brian Hutchinson, Alex Marin, Bin Zhang and Mari Ostendorf.

Overview

Authors present the AAWD corpus, a collection of 365 discussions drawn from Wikipedia talk pages and annotated with labels capturing two kinds of social acts: alignment moves and authority claims. Authors describe these social acts and annotation process, and analyze the resulting data set for interactions between participant status and social acts and between the social acts themselves.