Submissions/Wikipedia article traffic as a mirror of media exposure
After careful consideration, the programme committee has decided not to accept the below submission at this time. Thank you to the author(s) for participating in the Wikimania 2013 programme submission, we hope to still see you at Wikimania this August. |
- Submission no.
- 4033
- Subject no.
- C7
- Title of the submission
Wikipedia article traffic as a mirror of media exposure
- Type of submission
presentation
- Author of the submission
Marek Blahuš
- Country of origin
Czech Republic
- Affiliation
Esperanto and Free Knowledge, Education@Internet, Wikimedia Czech Republic, Wikimedia Poland scholarship
- E-mail address
wikimania2013blahus.cz
- Username
Blahma
- Personal homepage or blog
- Abstract
Everytime a particular issue appears in the news, people look it up in Wikipedia. Therefore, Wikipedia's article traffic statistics are a very representative measure of a topic's overall popularity. Stakeholders may use them to assess the effect of media campaigns or even identify previously unnoticed media exposure of their relevant topics. Increased awareness in Wikipedia's importance in informing the public may increase the willingness of these experts to contribute to Wikipedia about their field of expertise. I will be presenting a web tool that monitors a topic's hourly popularity and can link peaks to external events.
- Detailed proposal
Use of Wikipedia as a tool for monitoring the impact of public exposure of a given topic: Everytime when a particular issue is brought up in the news and it suddenly receives wide public attention – as is routinely the case of breaking news, anniversaries, discoveries, deaths of famous people or Google Doodles – many people go and look it up on-line. Very commonly, such people end up reading a Wikipedia article. Therefore, at least as far as the digitally-literate world is concerned, Wikipedia's article traffic statistics prove to be a very representative measure of a topic's overall popularity. Such information may be of particular importance to stakeholders interested in a certain topic, such as civil society (NGO) activists. The numbers of readers at specific time intervals can be used with advantage to monitor a topic's popularity in both the short and the long term and the derived observations can serve as valuable feedback for assessing the effect of media campaigns or even help identify periods of media exposure that would otherwise have passed unnoticed. Social activists share a common goal with the Wikimedia community, namely that Wikipedia serve high-quality information on the topic of their interest. A web tool that helps stakeholders monitor the popularity of relevant articles increases the willingness of experts in the field to help improve those articles, so that the incoming public eventually receives high-quality information about the subject. In course of the talk, I will present such a tool that continuously collects information from Domas Mituzas' pagecount data, shows hourly trends for select topics and enables the users to crowd-source identification of any peaks and to link them to external events. An early example showing the popularity of the "Esperanto" article on English Wikipedia, linked in time to possibly relevants observations (such as anniversaries, events, news articles) marked in pink, may already be seen at [1].
- Track
- Analysis and Public Engagement
- Length of presentation/talk
25 Minutes
- Language of presentation/talk
English
- Will you attend Wikimania if your submission is not accepted?
Yes
- Slides or further information (optional)
- Special requests
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- Please add some detail on how you intend to approach the topic, what kind of traffic data you have looked at etc. I am particularly interested in articles on newly described species. Daniel Mietchen (talk) 22:38, 22 April 2013 (UTC)
- Blue Rasberry (talk) 13:55, 3 May 2013 (UTC)
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