Difference between revisions of "Co-Authorship 2.0: Patterns of Collaboration in Wikipedia"
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+ | {{Infobox work | ||
+ | | title = Co-Authorship 2.0: Patterns of Collaboration in Wikipedia | ||
+ | | date = 2011 | ||
+ | | authors = [[David Laniado]]<br />[[Riccardo Tasso]] | ||
+ | | doi = 10.1145/1995966.1995994 | ||
+ | | link = https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1995966.1995994 | ||
+ | }} | ||
'''Co-Authorship 2.0: Patterns of Collaboration in Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2011, written by [[David Laniado]] and [[Riccardo Tasso]]. | '''Co-Authorship 2.0: Patterns of Collaboration in Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2011, written by [[David Laniado]] and [[Riccardo Tasso]]. | ||
== Overview == | == Overview == | ||
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation by online communities. To turn a wiki's revision history into a collaboration network, authors propose an algorithm that identifies as authors of a page the users who provided the most of its relevant content, measured in terms of quantity and of acceptance by the community. The scalability of this approach allows us to study the [[English Wikipedia]] community as a co-authorship network. Authors find evidence of the presence of a nucleus of very active contributors, who seem to spread over the whole wiki, and to interact preferentially with inexperienced users. The fundamental role played by this elite is witnessed by the growing centrality of sociometric stars in the network. Isolating the community active around a category, it is possible to study its specific dynamics and most influential authors. | The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation by online communities. To turn a wiki's revision history into a collaboration network, authors propose an algorithm that identifies as authors of a page the users who provided the most of its relevant content, measured in terms of quantity and of acceptance by the community. The scalability of this approach allows us to study the [[English Wikipedia]] community as a co-authorship network. Authors find evidence of the presence of a nucleus of very active contributors, who seem to spread over the whole wiki, and to interact preferentially with inexperienced users. The fundamental role played by this elite is witnessed by the growing centrality of sociometric stars in the network. Isolating the community active around a category, it is possible to study its specific dynamics and most influential authors. |
Revision as of 06:53, 22 June 2020
Authors | David Laniado Riccardo Tasso |
---|---|
Publication date | 2011 |
DOI | 10.1145/1995966.1995994 |
Links | Original |
Co-Authorship 2.0: Patterns of Collaboration in Wikipedia - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2011, written by David Laniado and Riccardo Tasso.
Overview
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation by online communities. To turn a wiki's revision history into a collaboration network, authors propose an algorithm that identifies as authors of a page the users who provided the most of its relevant content, measured in terms of quantity and of acceptance by the community. The scalability of this approach allows us to study the English Wikipedia community as a co-authorship network. Authors find evidence of the presence of a nucleus of very active contributors, who seem to spread over the whole wiki, and to interact preferentially with inexperienced users. The fundamental role played by this elite is witnessed by the growing centrality of sociometric stars in the network. Isolating the community active around a category, it is possible to study its specific dynamics and most influential authors.