Research:WMF Strategy document: Research about contributors
This page in a nutshell: This page documents an overview of research topics about content contributors gathered by Wikimedia Staff: User:Halfak (WMF), User:HaithamS (WMF), User:Siko (WMF), User:Guillaume_(WMF) and User:Slaporte (WMF). It was copied whole-sale from an internal wiki to this page on 19:45, 7 April 2016 (UTC) |
To make decisions about where the Wikimedia Foundation should head in the future, we need to understand more about our users. This group was tasked with finding out more about Wikimedia content contributors. See also What we have and What we don't know.
Article editing dynamics
[edit]Some studies have explored the dynamics of editing and how certain patterns of contribution are more likely to lead to high quality articles than others. Beyond the obvious predictors (# of contributors and content contributed) diversity seems to be important -- both in terms of amount of contribution to the article per editor and in the amount of experience each editor brings to the article. To state it simply, it is important that some editors are highly experienced while others are more green. It's important that few editors contribute a lot to an article while most others contribute only a little.
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Process and norms
[edit]In order to coordinate asynchronously and in the absence of centralized organizational structures, Wikipedians have developed formalized processes and norms. These processes represent a sort of social machinery whose movements result in desirable outcomes. The development and formalization of these norms has historically been distributed and by those most affected by them (this is highly desirable[16]).
To newcomers -- who couldn't have been around during the formation of processes and norms -- the rules are complex and often non-intuitive. This causes difficulty and often leads to frustration for good-faith newcomers. It also results in power disparities where experienced editors are more empowered by their "process literacy" to "win" disputes.
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Integration of technology and social practice
[edit]The development of technologies to support Wikipedian process has been essential to reducing the workload of humans (so that they can focus on article editing), and in some cases, for making the work tractable at scale. Robots are the most commonly cited example of bespoke code, but the JavaScript gadget system and even clever re-applications of MediaWiki's functionality have also become tightly woven within the social practice of Wikipedia editing. The technologies developed by Wikipedians perpetuate the ideological view of their developers, and this has lead to power dynamics and organizational breakdowns when the technologies used by editors operating in one role allow them to overpower editors operating in another. How social practice and technology come together to make Wikipedia "work" in a distributed way is still unknown.
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Community dynamics
[edit]Historically, we have used the number of monthly active editors as a measurement of community size and health. All large Wikipedias appear to demonstrate a similar pattern of exponential rise starting in 2004 and slowing in 2007. While most wikis' active editor counts held relatively constant since 2006, the English Wikipedia -- both the largest and oldest community -- has experienced a substantial and sustained decline. At the root of this decline in English Wikipedia's active editors appears to be a sudden decline in the retention of good-faith newcomers due to the negative environment caused by counter-vandalism tools that "view newcomers through a lens of suspiciousness". Recent work has developed new social spaces and technologies for identifying and supporting newcomers in need of help. We have yet to see evidence that these strategies are effective in a controlled setting.
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Gender of editors
[edit]In a January 2011 New York Times article, Noam Cohen described a wide gender gap among Wikipedia’s editors: just 13% of Wikipedia’s contributors are female, according to a 2009 UNU-MERIT survey. Since then, a series of studies have been performed to confirm the truth the the gap and to examine it's effect. Using different method for controlling for the rate at which editors respond to surveys, researchers agree that the proportion of female editors was at ~%16 as of 2009. More recently, a 2014 survey of Global South participants across all Wikimedia projects found 25% of contributors in the Global South were female, but it is unclear whether this reflects any change over time, Global South-specific trends, or is simply a result of different sampling methods. Regardless of the exact percentage, the effect of this gap is evident in content quality; articles about women, or of interest primarily to women, are under-represented on Wikipedia (as is likely for some other underrepresented groups). Researchers have drawn from the literature on male-dominated work places to describe the status and resiliency of the gap. These theories explain how current male editors can cultivate an environment that is distasteful to women. Researchers have also indicated that female-identifying newbies are reverted more than males, and that gender-based hostility negatively impacts some female English Wikipedian's stress levels and ability to contribute consistently. Edit-a-thons, education programs and online safe spaces for newbies (see en:WP:Teahouse) have been among the solutions attempted to date. The large-scale effect that any of these initiatives have had so far is unknown due to lack of regular and consistent measures of the gap.
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Volunteer motivation
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Editor roles
[edit]The work of contributing to a knowledge artifact like Wikipedia is complex, so contributors will tend to specialize in the roles that they fill. These roles range from content-focused (actual writing of content), support (templates, building tools/bots, worklists, etc.), administrative (sysops and bureaucrats), social/political work (e.g. mediating disputes) and quality control(vandal fighting & new page patrol). There's general agreement that newcomers tend to enter via content-creation roles and move to social and technical roles as they gain experience. Roles have distinct classes of technologies that support their work practices (e.g. suggestbot for content contribution, AIVHelperBot for sysops and Huggle for quality control).
Notably, the community of sysops on English Wikipedia has received intense scrutiny by the research community. "RfA" elections tend to proceed like real-life political elections. An editor's history of work and interactions with others are brought under intense scrutiny. Editors who deflect personal attacks and reflect on their work (over their personal characteristics) tend to be more likely to be appointed. Over the last 6-7 years, the requirements imposed on new sysops has become substantially more strict and this case cause a decline in the success rate of RfA's and a decline in the number of administrators on the English Wikipedia.
While this role behavior is is heavily studied in English Wikipedia, it's not clear how these roles fill an ecosystem and whether the decline in sysops should be concerning. Outside of English Wikipedia, the roles that editors take is mostly unstudied.
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The Global South
[edit]Until recently, very little research has focused specifically on Global South contributors. In 2014, however, WMF conducted a survey that focused on understanding the key stats and needs of our users (both readers, and editors) in the regions listed in the WMF's New Global South Strategy. Wiktionary, followed by Wikiquote and Wikibooks, was reported to be the most-contributed to project, after Wikipedia.
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References
[edit]- ↑ a b Viégas, F. B., Wattenberg, M., & Dave, K. (2004, April). Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualizations. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems (pp. 575-582). ACM.
- ↑ Wilkinson, D. M. (2008, July). Strong regularities in online peer production. In Proceedings of the 9th ACM conference on Electronic commerce (pp. 302-309). ACM.
- ↑ http://www.businessinsider.com/2009/1/who-the-hell-writes-wikipedia-anyway
- ↑ http://www.aaronsw.com/2002/whowriteswikipedia/swartz2006
- ↑ Priedhorsky, R., Chen, J., Lam, S. T. K., Panciera, K., Terveen, L., & Riedl, J. (2007, November). Creating, destroying, and restoring value in Wikipedia. In Proceedings of the 2007 international ACM conference on Supporting group work (pp. 259-268). ACM.
- ↑ Viegas, F. B., Wattenberg, M., Kriss, J., & Van Ham, F. (2007, January). Talk before you type: Coordination in Wikipedia. In System Sciences, 2007. HICSS 2007. 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on (pp. 78-78). IEEE.
- ↑ a b Kittur, A., Chi, E., Pendleton, B. A., Suh, B., & Mytkowicz, T. (2007). Power of the few vs. wisdom of the crowd: Wikipedia and the rise of the bourgeoisie. World wide web, 1(2), 19.
- ↑ Arazy, O., & Nov, O. (2010, February). Determinants of wikipedia quality: the roles of global and local contribution inequality. In Proceedings of the 2010 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work (pp. 233-236). ACM.
- ↑ Arazy, O., Nov, O., Patterson, R., & Yeo, L. (2011). Information quality in Wikipedia: The effects of group composition and task conflict. Journal of Management Information Systems, 27(4), 71-98.
- ↑ Kittur, A., & Kraut, R. E. (2008, November). Harnessing the wisdom of crowds in wikipedia: quality through coordination. In Proceedings of the 2008 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work (pp. 37-46). ACM.
- ↑ André, P., Kraut, R. E., & Kittur, A. (2014, April). Effects of simultaneous and sequential work structures on distributed collaborative interdependent tasks. In Proceedings of the 32nd annual ACM conference on Human factors in computing systems (pp. 139-148). ACM.
- ↑ Halfaker, A., Kittur, A., & Riedl, J. (2011, October). Don't bite the newbies: how reverts affect the quantity and quality of Wikipedia work. In Proceedings of the 7th international symposium on wikis and open collaboration (pp. 163-172). ACM.
- ↑ Halfaker, A., Kittur, A., Kraut, R., & Riedl, J. (2009, October). A jury of your peers: quality, experience and ownership in Wikipedia. In Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration (p. 15). ACM.
- ↑ Schneider, J., Gelley, B. S., & Halfaker, A. (2014, August). Accept, decline, postpone: How newcomer productivity is reduced in English Wikipedia by pre-publication review. In Proceedings of The International Symposium on Open Collaboration (p. 26). ACM.
- ↑ Ford, H., Sen, S., Musicant, D. R., & Miller, N. (2013, August). Getting to the source: where does Wikipedia get its information from?. In Proceedings of the 9th International Symposium on Open Collaboration (p. 9). ACM.
- ↑ Ostrom, E., Walker, J., & Gardner, R. (1992). Covenants with and without a Sword: Self-governance Is Possible. American Political Science Review, 86(02), 404-417.
- ↑ a b Ford, H., & Geiger, R. S. (2012, August). Writing up rather than writing down: Becoming wikipedia literate. In Proceedings of the Eighth Annual International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration (p. 16). ACM.
- ↑ Beschastnikh, I., Kriplean, T., & McDonald, D. W. (2008, March). Wikipedian Self-Governance in Action: Motivating the Policy Lens. In ICWSM.
- ↑ Bryant, S. L., Forte, A., & Bruckman, A. (2005, November). Becoming Wikipedian: transformation of participation in a collaborative online encyclopedia. In Proceedings of the 2005 international ACM SIGGROUP conference on Supporting group work (pp. 1-10). ACM.
- ↑ Forte, A., & Bruckman, A. (2008, January). Scaling consensus: Increasing decentralization in Wikipedia governance. In Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Proceedings of the 41st Annual (pp. 157-157). IEEE.
- ↑ a b c d e Halfaker, A., Geiger, R. S., Morgan, J. T., & Riedl, J. (2012). The rise and decline of an open collaboration system: How Wikipedia’s reaction to popularity is causing its decline. American Behavioral Scientist, 0002764212469365.
- ↑ a b Geiger, R. S. (2011). The lives of bots. Critical point of view: A Wikipedia reader. http://www.stuartgeiger.com/lives-of-bots-wikipedia-cpov.pdf
- ↑ Geiger, R. S., & Ribes, D. (2010, February). The work of sustaining order in wikipedia: the banning of a vandal. In Proceedings of the 2010 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work (pp. 117-126). ACM.
- ↑ a b Halfaker, A., Geiger, R. S., & Terveen, L. G. (2014, April). Snuggle: designing for efficient socialization and ideological critique. In Proceedings of the 32nd annual ACM conference on Human factors in computing systems (pp. 311-320). ACM.
- ↑ Geiger, R. S. (2014). Bots, bespoke, code and the materiality of software platforms. Information, Communication & Society, 17(3), 342-356.
- ↑ Ford, H. (2014). Infoboxes and cleanup tags: Artifacts of Wikipedia newsmaking. Journalism, 1464884914545739.
- ↑ West, A. G., Kannan, S., & Lee, I. (2010, April). Detecting Wikipedia vandalism via spatio-temporal analysis of revision metadata?. In Proceedings of the Third European Workshop on System Security (pp. 22-28). ACM.
- ↑ Geiger, R. S., & Ribes, D. (2011, January). Trace ethnography: Following coordination through documentary practices. In System Sciences (HICSS), 2011 44th Hawaii International Conference on (pp. 1-10). IEEE.
- ↑ Wattenberg, M., Viégas, F. B., & Hollenbach, K. (2007). Visualizing activity on wikipedia with chromograms. In Human-Computer Interaction–INTERACT 2007 (pp. 272-287). Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
- ↑ a b Bryant, S. L., Forte, A., & Bruckman, A. (2005, November). Becoming Wikipedian: transformation of participation in a collaborative online encyclopedia. In Proceedings of the 2005 international ACM SIGGROUP conference on Supporting group work (pp. 1-10). ACM.
- ↑ Musicant, D. R., Ren, Y., Johnson, J. A., & Riedl, J. (2011, October). Mentoring in Wikipedia: a clash of cultures. In Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration (pp. 173-182). ACM.
- ↑ Morgan, J. T., Bouterse, S., Walls, H., & Stierch, S. (2013, February). Tea and sympathy: crafting positive new user experiences on wikipedia. In Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported cooperative work (pp. 839-848). ACM.
- ↑ a b Lam, S. T. K., Uduwage, A., Dong, Z., Sen, S., Musicant, D. R., Terveen, L., & Riedl, J. (2011, October). WP: clubhouse?: an exploration of Wikipedia's gender imbalance. In Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration (pp. 1-10). ACM. pdf
- ↑ Hill, B. M., & Shaw, A. (2013). The Wikipedia Gender Gap Revisited: Characterizing Survey Response Bias with Propensity Score Estimation. PloS one, 8(6), e65782. html
- ↑ http://people.ischool.berkeley.edu/~coye/Pubs/Articles/GenderWikiSym2011.pdf
- ↑ Collier, B., & Bear, J. (2012, February). Conflict, criticism, or confidence: an empirical examination of the gender gap in wikipedia contributions. In Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (pp. 383-392). ACM. pdf
- ↑ m:Grants:IEG/Women_and_Wikipedia/Midpoint#Emotion_work_and_emotional_labor
- ↑ Reagle, J. (2013, January). “Free as in sexist?” Free culture and the gender gap. First Monday, Volume 18, Number 1 - 7 January 2013, http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/4291/3381
- ↑ See Collective effort model
- ↑ Ling, K., Beenen, G., Ludford, P., Wang, X., Chang, K., Li, X., ... & Kraut, R. (2005). Using social psychology to motivate contributions to online communities. Journal of Computer‐Mediated Communication, 10(4), 00-00.
- ↑ Nov, O. (2007). What motivates wikipedians?. Communications of the ACM, 50(11), 60-64.
- ↑ Yang, H. L., & Lai, C. Y. (2010). Motivations of Wikipedia content contributors. Computers in Human Behavior, 26(6), 1377-1383.
- ↑ Preece, J., & Shneiderman, B. (2009). The reader-to-leader framework: Motivating technology-mediated social participation. AIS Transactions on Human-Computer Interaction, 1(1), 13-32.
- ↑ Panciera, K., Halfaker, A., & Terveen, L. (2009, May). Wikipedians are born, not made: a study of power editors on Wikipedia. In Proceedings of the ACM 2009 international conference on Supporting group work (pp. 51-60). ACM.
- ↑ Welser, H. T., Cosley, D., Kossinets, G., Lin, A., Dokshin, F., Gay, G., & Smith, M. (2011, February). Finding social roles in Wikipedia. In Proceedings of the 2011 iConference (pp. 122-129). ACM.
- ↑ Arazy, O., Ortega, F., Nov, O., Yeo, L., & Balila, A. (2015). Functional Roles and Career Paths in Wikipedia. pdf
- ↑ NoSeptember, (2007). Admin Stats, en:User:NoSeptember/Admin_stats
- ↑ Burke, M. and Kraut, R., “Mopping up: modeling wikipedia promotion decisions,” in Proceedings of the 2008 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW), San Diego, California, USA, 2008, 27-36.
- ↑ Butler, B., Joyce, E., & Pike, J. (2008, April). Don't look now, but we've created a bureaucracy: the nature and roles of policies and rules in wikipedia. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems (pp. 1101-1110). ACM.
- ↑ Bartov, A. (2013). WMF's New Global South Strategy. pdf
- ↑ Global South, WMF Metrics Meeting February 2015
- ↑ Haitham, S. (2014). Grantmaking Quarterly Review. pdf
- ↑ Global South User Survey 2014 - Full Analysis Report, Page 115
- ↑ Global South User Survey 2014 - Full Analysis Report, Page 214
- ↑ Global South User Survey 2014 - Full Analysis Report
- ↑ Global South User Survey 2014 - Full Analysis Report