References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature

From Wikipedia Quality
Revision as of 09:57, 12 February 2021 by Marion (talk | contribs) (cat.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search


References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature
Authors
M. Dylan Bould
Emily Hladkowicz
Ashlee-Ann Pigford
Lee-Anne Ufholz
Tatyana Postonogova
Eunkyung Shin
Sylvain Boet
Publication date
2014
DOI
10.1136/bmj.g1585
Links
Original Preprint

References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2014, written by M. Dylan Bould, Emily Hladkowicz, Ashlee-Ann Pigford, Lee-Anne Ufholz, Tatyana Postonogova, Eunkyung Shin and Sylvain Boet.

Overview

Objectives To examine indexed health science journals to evaluate the prevalence of Wikipedia citations, identify the journals that publish articles with Wikipedia citations, and determine how Wikipedia is being cited. Design Bibliometric analysis. Study selection Publications in the English language that included citations to Wikipedia were retrieved using the online databases Scopus and Web of Science. Data sources To identify health science journals, results were refined using Ulrich’s database, selecting for citations from journals indexed in Medline, PubMed, or Embase. Using Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Reports, 2011 impact factors were collected for all journals included in the search. Data extraction Resulting citations were thematically coded, and descriptive statistics were calculated. Results 1433 full text articles from 1008 journals indexed in Medline, PubMed, or Embase with 2049 Wikipedia citations were accessed. The frequency of Wikipedia citations has increased over time; most citations occurred after December 2010. More than half of the citations were coded as definitions (n=648; 31.6%) or descriptions (n=482; 23.5%). Citations were not limited to journals with a low or no impact factor; the search found Wikipedia citations in many journals with high impact factors. Conclusions Many publications are citing information from a tertiary source that can be edited by anyone, although permanent, evidence based sources are available. Authors encourage journal editors and reviewers to use caution when publishing articles that cite Wikipedia.

Embed

Wikipedia Quality

Bould, M. Dylan; Hladkowicz, Emily; Pigford, Ashlee-Ann; Ufholz, Lee-Anne; Postonogova, Tatyana; Shin, Eunkyung; Boet, Sylvain. (2014). "[[References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature]]". British Medical Journal Publishing Group. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.g1585.

English Wikipedia

{{cite journal |last1=Bould |first1=M. Dylan |last2=Hladkowicz |first2=Emily |last3=Pigford |first3=Ashlee-Ann |last4=Ufholz |first4=Lee-Anne |last5=Postonogova |first5=Tatyana |last6=Shin |first6=Eunkyung |last7=Boet |first7=Sylvain |title=References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature |date=2014 |doi=10.1136/bmj.g1585 |url=https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/References_That_Anyone_Can_Edit:_Review_of_Wikipedia_Citations_in_Peer_Reviewed_Health_Science_Literature |journal=British Medical Journal Publishing Group}}

HTML

Bould, M. Dylan; Hladkowicz, Emily; Pigford, Ashlee-Ann; Ufholz, Lee-Anne; Postonogova, Tatyana; Shin, Eunkyung; Boet, Sylvain. (2014). &quot;<a href="https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/References_That_Anyone_Can_Edit:_Review_of_Wikipedia_Citations_in_Peer_Reviewed_Health_Science_Literature">References That Anyone Can Edit: Review of Wikipedia Citations in Peer Reviewed Health Science Literature</a>&quot;. British Medical Journal Publishing Group. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.g1585.