Difference between revisions of "Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia"

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{{Infobox work
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| title = Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia
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| date = 2013
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| authors = [[Tobias Futterer]]<br />[[Peter A. Gloor]]<br />[[Tushar Malhotra]]<br />[[Harrison Mfula]]<br />[[Karsten Packmohr]]<br />[[Stefan Schultheiss]]
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| link = https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2836264
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| plink = https://arxiv.org/abs/1308.1166
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}}
 
'''Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2013, written by [[Tobias Futterer]], [[Peter A. Gloor]], [[Tushar Malhotra]], [[Harrison Mfula]], [[Karsten Packmohr]] and [[Stefan Schultheiss]].
 
'''Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2013, written by [[Tobias Futterer]], [[Peter A. Gloor]], [[Tushar Malhotra]], [[Harrison Mfula]], [[Karsten Packmohr]] and [[Stefan Schultheiss]].
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
 
More and more user-generated content is complementing conventional journalism. While authors don't think that CNN or New York Times and its professional journalists will disappear anytime soon, formidable competition is emerging through humble [[Wikipedia editors]]. In earlier work (Becker 2012), authors found that entertainment and sports news appeared on average about two hours earlier on [[Wikipedia]] than on CNN and Reuters online. In this project authors build a news-reader that automatically identifies late-breaking news among the most recent Wikipedia articles and then displays it on a dedicated Web site.
 
More and more user-generated content is complementing conventional journalism. While authors don't think that CNN or New York Times and its professional journalists will disappear anytime soon, formidable competition is emerging through humble [[Wikipedia editors]]. In earlier work (Becker 2012), authors found that entertainment and sports news appeared on average about two hours earlier on [[Wikipedia]] than on CNN and Reuters online. In this project authors build a news-reader that automatically identifies late-breaking news among the most recent Wikipedia articles and then displays it on a dedicated Web site.

Revision as of 00:22, 9 February 2021


Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia
Authors
Tobias Futterer
Peter A. Gloor
Tushar Malhotra
Harrison Mfula
Karsten Packmohr
Stefan Schultheiss
Publication date
2013
Links
Original Preprint

Wikipulse - a News-Portal based on Wikipedia - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Tobias Futterer, Peter A. Gloor, Tushar Malhotra, Harrison Mfula, Karsten Packmohr and Stefan Schultheiss.

Overview

More and more user-generated content is complementing conventional journalism. While authors don't think that CNN or New York Times and its professional journalists will disappear anytime soon, formidable competition is emerging through humble Wikipedia editors. In earlier work (Becker 2012), authors found that entertainment and sports news appeared on average about two hours earlier on Wikipedia than on CNN and Reuters online. In this project authors build a news-reader that automatically identifies late-breaking news among the most recent Wikipedia articles and then displays it on a dedicated Web site.