Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History

From Wikipedia Quality
Revision as of 16:08, 7 December 2019 by Maria (talk | contribs) (Adding embed)
Jump to: navigation, search


Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History
Authors
Adam Wierzbicki
Piotr Turek
Radoslaw Nielek
Publication date
2010
DOI
10.1145/1832772.1832806
Links
Original

Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2010, written by Adam Wierzbicki, Piotr Turek and Radoslaw Nielek.

Overview

This work presents an evalation method of teams of authors in Wikipedia based on social network analysis. Authors have created an implicit social network based on the edit history of articles. This network consists of four dimensions: trust, distrust, acquaintance and knowledge. Trust and distrust are based on content modifications (copying and deleting respectively); acquaintance is based on the amount of discussion on articles' talk pages between a given pair of authors and knowledge is based on the categories in which an author typically contributes. As authors edit the Wikipedia, the social network grows and changes to take into account their collaboration patterns, creating a succinct summary of entire edit history.

Embed

Wikipedia Quality

Wierzbicki, Adam; Turek, Piotr; Nielek, Radoslaw. (2010). "[[Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History]]".DOI: 10.1145/1832772.1832806.

English Wikipedia

{{cite journal |last1=Wierzbicki |first1=Adam |last2=Turek |first2=Piotr |last3=Nielek |first3=Radoslaw |title=Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History |date=2010 |doi=10.1145/1832772.1832806 |url=https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/Learning_About_Team_Collaboration_from_Wikipedia_Edit_History}}

HTML

Wierzbicki, Adam; Turek, Piotr; Nielek, Radoslaw. (2010). &quot;<a href="https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/Learning_About_Team_Collaboration_from_Wikipedia_Edit_History">Learning About Team Collaboration from Wikipedia Edit History</a>&quot;.DOI: 10.1145/1832772.1832806.