Pages that link to "Aaron Halfaker"
The following pages link to Aaron Halfaker:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Interpolating Quality Dynamics in Wikipedia and Demonstrating the Keilana Effect (← links)
- Who did What: Editor Role Identification in Wikipedia (← links)
- Accept, Decline, Postpone: How Newcomer Productivity is Reduced in English Wikipedia by Pre-Publication Review (← links)
- When the Levee Breaks: Without Bots, What Happens to Wikipedias Quality Control Processes? (← links)
- The Rise and Decline of an Open Collaboration System: How Wikipedias Reaction to Popularity Is Causing Its Decline (← links)
- Dont Bite the Newbies: How Reverts Affect the Quantity and Quality of Wikipedia Work (← links)
- NICE: Social Translucence Through UI Intervention (← links)
- A Jury of Your Peers: Quality, Experience and Ownership in Wikipedia (← links)
- Wikimedia Foundation (← links)
- United States (← links)
- When the Levee Breaks: Without Bots, What Happens to Wikipedia's Quality Control Processes? (← links)
- Evaluating the Impact of the Wikipedia Teahouse on Newcomer Socialization and Retention (← links)
- Using Edit Sessions to Measure Participation in Wikipedia (← links)
- Making Peripheral Participation Legitimate: Reader Engagement Experiments in Wikipedia (← links)
- Operationalizing Conflict and Cooperation Between Automated Software Agents in Wikipedia: a Replication and Expansion of 'Even Good Bots Fight' (← links)
- Open Algorithmic Systems: Lessons on Opening the Black Box from Wikipedia (← links)
- Defense Mechanism or Socialization Tactic? Improving Wikipedia's Notifications to Rejected Contributors (← links)
- Don'T Bite the Newbies: How Reverts Affect the Quantity and Quality of Wikipedia Work (← links)
- Wikipedians are Born, Not Made: a Study of Power Editors on Wikipedia (← links)
- The Rise and Decline of an Open Collaboration System How Wikipedia’s Reaction to Popularity is Causing Its Decline (← links)
- Maintaining the Efficiency of Open Production Systems at Scale: a Case Study of Wikipedia (← links)