Difference between revisions of "The Efficiency of Wikipedia's Evolution"

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'''The Efficiency of Wikipedia's Evolution''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Emilie Jackson.
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'''The Efficiency of Wikipedia's Evolution''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2013, written by [[Emilie Jackson]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Wikipedia, the world's most popular encyclopedia, is a unique enterprise characterized by its purely decentralized production. Thus, it is important to understand whether editors produce the pages in an efficient manner. Author examine how efficiently Wikipedia has developed from three perspectives. First, Author evaluate whether the editors produce the pages with the highest eventual views first. Author find that at a given point in time, editors create roughly 80% of the maximum possible views that could have been created up through that time. Second, Author examine whether pages are created in order of how well-connected they are to other pages in the link structure, so how easy they are to find. Author find that a page's probability of being created at any point in time is significantly and substantially increasing in its relative number of views and connections. However, this effect diminishes with time and page creation was much less sensitive to these measures in 2008 than in 2001. Third, Author compare which pages frequent versus infrequent editors create. Author find that frequent editors tend to produce highly-viewed pages while infrequent editors tend to produce better connected pages.
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Wikipedia, the world's most popular encyclopedia, is a unique enterprise characterized by its purely decentralized production. Thus, it is important to understand whether editors produce the pages in an efficient manner. Author examine how efficiently [[Wikipedia]] has developed from three perspectives. First, Author evaluate whether the editors produce the pages with the highest eventual views first. Author find that at a given point in time, editors create roughly 80% of the maximum possible views that could have been created up through that time. Second, Author examine whether pages are created in order of how well-connected they are to other pages in the link structure, so how easy they are to find. Author find that a page's probability of being created at any point in time is significantly and substantially increasing in its relative number of views and connections. However, this effect diminishes with time and page creation was much less sensitive to these [[measures]] in 2008 than in 2001. Third, Author compare which pages frequent versus infrequent editors create. Author find that frequent editors tend to produce highly-viewed pages while infrequent editors tend to produce better connected pages.

Revision as of 08:02, 22 June 2020

The Efficiency of Wikipedia's Evolution - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Emilie Jackson.

Overview

Wikipedia, the world's most popular encyclopedia, is a unique enterprise characterized by its purely decentralized production. Thus, it is important to understand whether editors produce the pages in an efficient manner. Author examine how efficiently Wikipedia has developed from three perspectives. First, Author evaluate whether the editors produce the pages with the highest eventual views first. Author find that at a given point in time, editors create roughly 80% of the maximum possible views that could have been created up through that time. Second, Author examine whether pages are created in order of how well-connected they are to other pages in the link structure, so how easy they are to find. Author find that a page's probability of being created at any point in time is significantly and substantially increasing in its relative number of views and connections. However, this effect diminishes with time and page creation was much less sensitive to these measures in 2008 than in 2001. Third, Author compare which pages frequent versus infrequent editors create. Author find that frequent editors tend to produce highly-viewed pages while infrequent editors tend to produce better connected pages.