This paper presents the results of a genre analysis of two web-based collaborative authoring environments, Wikipedia and Everything2, both of which are intended as repositories of encyclopedic knowledge and are open to contributions from the public. Using corpus linguistic methods and factor analysis of word counts for features of formality and informality, we show that the greater the degree of post-production editorial control afforded by the system, the more formal and standardized the lan-guage of the collaboratively-authored documents be-comes, analogous to that found in traditional print ency-clopedias. Paradoxically, users who faithfully appropri-ate such systems create homogeneous entries, at odds with the goal of open-access author...
This article explores the differences between collaborative and collective authorship, focusing on t...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
Collaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an example of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2009. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical ...
In the past 15 years, the rapid development of web technologies has created novel ways of collaborat...
AbstractCollaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an ex...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021Is Wikipedia a standardized platform with a common mod...
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation ...
Traditional activities change in surprising ways when computermediated communication becomes a compo...
We report a study of Wikipedia in which we use a mixed-methods approach to understand how participat...
<p></p><p>Abstract This article aims to analyze textualization in entries of Wiki encyclopedias in o...
Wikis are often considered to be the core platform of peer production. This chapter delineates their...
As large, collaboratively authored hypertexts such as Wikipedia grow so does the requirement both fo...
Previous attempts at studying collaboration within Wikipedia have focused on simple metrics like rig...
The rise of the Internet has enabled collaboration and co-operation on an unprecedentedly large scal...
This article explores the differences between collaborative and collective authorship, focusing on t...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
Collaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an example of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2009. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical ...
In the past 15 years, the rapid development of web technologies has created novel ways of collaborat...
AbstractCollaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an ex...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021Is Wikipedia a standardized platform with a common mod...
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation ...
Traditional activities change in surprising ways when computermediated communication becomes a compo...
We report a study of Wikipedia in which we use a mixed-methods approach to understand how participat...
<p></p><p>Abstract This article aims to analyze textualization in entries of Wiki encyclopedias in o...
Wikis are often considered to be the core platform of peer production. This chapter delineates their...
As large, collaboratively authored hypertexts such as Wikipedia grow so does the requirement both fo...
Previous attempts at studying collaboration within Wikipedia have focused on simple metrics like rig...
The rise of the Internet has enabled collaboration and co-operation on an unprecedentedly large scal...
This article explores the differences between collaborative and collective authorship, focusing on t...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
Collaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an example of...