Difference between revisions of "Searching Wikipedia: Learning the Why, the How, and the Role Played by Emotion"

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(Overview: Searching Wikipedia: Learning the Why, the How, and the Role Played by Emotion)
 
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'''Searching Wikipedia: Learning the Why, the How, and the Role Played by Emotion''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2012, written by Hanna Knäusl.
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'''Searching Wikipedia: Learning the Why, the How, and the Role Played by Emotion''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2012, written by [[Hanna Knäusl]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Searching Wikipedia has been the focus of study for an increasing number of information retrieval publications. In recent years dierent IR tasks have used Wikipedia as a basis for evaluating algorithms and interfaces for various types of search tasks, including Question Answering, Exploratory Search, Entity Search and Structured Document retrieval. Despite being associated with these well-dened task types, little is known about why people actually search wikipedia, what they try to nd, how and why they try to
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Searching [[Wikipedia]] has been the focus of study for an increasing number of [[information retrieval]] publications. In recent years dierent IR tasks have used Wikipedia as a basis for evaluating algorithms and interfaces for various types of search tasks, including Question Answering, Exploratory Search, Entity Search and Structured Document retrieval. Despite being associated with these well-dened task types, little is known about why people actually search wikipedia, what they try to nd, how and why they try to

Revision as of 08:40, 6 January 2020

Searching Wikipedia: Learning the Why, the How, and the Role Played by Emotion - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2012, written by Hanna Knäusl.

Overview

Searching Wikipedia has been the focus of study for an increasing number of information retrieval publications. In recent years dierent IR tasks have used Wikipedia as a basis for evaluating algorithms and interfaces for various types of search tasks, including Question Answering, Exploratory Search, Entity Search and Structured Document retrieval. Despite being associated with these well-dened task types, little is known about why people actually search wikipedia, what they try to nd, how and why they try to