Difference between revisions of "Wikipedia as a Time Machine"

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'''Wikipedia as a Time Machine''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2014, written by Stewart Whiting, Joemon M. Jose and Omar Alonso.
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'''Wikipedia as a Time Machine''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2014, written by [[Stewart Whiting]], [[Joemon M. Jose]] and [[Omar Alonso]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
Wikipedia encyclopaedia projects, which consist of vast collections of user-edited articles covering a wide range of topics, are among some of the most popular websites on internet. With so many users working collaboratively, mainstream events are often very quickly reflected by both authors editing content and users reading articles. With temporal signals such as changing article content, page viewing activity and the link graph readily available, Wikipedia has gained attention in recent years as a source of temporal event information. This paper serves as an overview of the characteristics and past work which support Wikipedia (English, in this case) for time-aware information retrieval research. Furthermore, authors discuss the main content and meta-data temporal signals available along with illustrative analysis. Authors briefly discuss the source and nature of each signal, and any issues that may complicate extraction and use. To encourage further temporal research based on Wikipedia, authors have released all the distilled datasets referred to in this paper.
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Wikipedia encyclopaedia projects, which consist of vast collections of user-edited articles covering a wide range of topics, are among some of the most popular websites on internet. With so many users working collaboratively, mainstream events are often very quickly reflected by both authors editing content and users reading articles. With temporal signals such as changing article content, page viewing activity and the link graph readily available, [[Wikipedia]] has gained attention in recent years as a source of temporal event information. This paper serves as an overview of the characteristics and past work which support Wikipedia (English, in this case) for time-aware [[information retrieval]] research. Furthermore, authors discuss the main content and meta-data temporal signals available along with illustrative analysis. Authors briefly discuss the source and nature of each signal, and any issues that may complicate extraction and use. To encourage further temporal research based on Wikipedia, authors have released all the distilled datasets referred to in this paper.

Revision as of 00:28, 20 December 2020

Wikipedia as a Time Machine - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2014, written by Stewart Whiting, Joemon M. Jose and Omar Alonso.

Overview

Wikipedia encyclopaedia projects, which consist of vast collections of user-edited articles covering a wide range of topics, are among some of the most popular websites on internet. With so many users working collaboratively, mainstream events are often very quickly reflected by both authors editing content and users reading articles. With temporal signals such as changing article content, page viewing activity and the link graph readily available, Wikipedia has gained attention in recent years as a source of temporal event information. This paper serves as an overview of the characteristics and past work which support Wikipedia (English, in this case) for time-aware information retrieval research. Furthermore, authors discuss the main content and meta-data temporal signals available along with illustrative analysis. Authors briefly discuss the source and nature of each signal, and any issues that may complicate extraction and use. To encourage further temporal research based on Wikipedia, authors have released all the distilled datasets referred to in this paper.