From Comparison Matrix to Variability Model: the Wikipedia Case Study
Authors | Nicolas Sannier Mathieu Acher Benoit Baudry |
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Publication date | 2013 |
DOI | 10.1109/ASE.2013.6693116 |
Links | Original |
From Comparison Matrix to Variability Model: the Wikipedia Case Study - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2013, written by Nicolas Sannier, Mathieu Acher and Benoit Baudry.
Overview
Product comparison matrices (PCMs) provide a convenient way to document the discriminant features of a family of related products and now abound on the internet. Despite their apparent simplicity, the information present in existing PCMs can be very heterogeneous, partial, ambiguous, hard to exploit by users who desire to choose an appropriate product. Variability Models (VMs) can be employed to formulate in a more precise way the semantics of PCMs and enable automated reasoning such as assisted configuration. Yet, the gap between PCMs and VMs should be precisely understood and automated techniques should support the transition between the two. In this paper, authors propose variability patterns that describe PCMs content and conduct an empirical analysis of 300+ PCMs mined from Wikipedia. Authors findings are a first step toward better engineering techniques for maintaining and configuring PCMs.
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Wikipedia Quality
Sannier, Nicolas; Acher, Mathieu; Baudry, Benoit. (2013). "[[From Comparison Matrix to Variability Model: the Wikipedia Case Study]]".DOI: 10.1109/ASE.2013.6693116.
English Wikipedia
{{cite journal |last1=Sannier |first1=Nicolas |last2=Acher |first2=Mathieu |last3=Baudry |first3=Benoit |title=From Comparison Matrix to Variability Model: the Wikipedia Case Study |date=2013 |doi=10.1109/ASE.2013.6693116 |url=https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/From_Comparison_Matrix_to_Variability_Model:_the_Wikipedia_Case_Study}}
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Sannier, Nicolas; Acher, Mathieu; Baudry, Benoit. (2013). "<a href="https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/From_Comparison_Matrix_to_Variability_Model:_the_Wikipedia_Case_Study">From Comparison Matrix to Variability Model: the Wikipedia Case Study</a>".DOI: 10.1109/ASE.2013.6693116.