International audienceResearch has identified a significant gender gap on the online encyclopedia, Wikipedia. The current research used a mixed experimental (type of feedback) and quasi-experimental (gender) design to examine the editing behaviors of college students during a public, collaborative editing task to identify potential factors underlying the Wikipedia gender gap. Overall, women edited more than men. However, in the editing condition most akin to Wikipedia, wherein female peer editors were underrepresented in the essay edits and feedback from peers was neutral, men trended towards adding more content than woman. Women added more content than men in this male-dominated essay condition when peer editors modeled constructive feedba...
As a global, multilingual project, Wikipedia could serve as a repository for the world's knowledge o...
This paper studies the conversations behind the operations of a large-scale, online knowledge produc...
<div><p>Opt-in surveys are the most widespread method used to study participation in online communit...
International audienceResearch has identified a significant gender gap on the online encyclopedia, W...
Wikipedia has rapidly become an invaluable destination for mil-lions of information-seeking users. H...
This study compared gender across 289 language editions of Wikipedia. First, we analyzed the extent ...
Wikipedia's contributor population contains a significant gender gap: only about 8.5% of Wikipedia's...
In 2010, UNU-MERIT researchers surveyed editors of Wikipedia, “the online encyclopedia that anyone c...
Feminist STS has long established that science's provenance as a male domain continues to define wha...
Wikipedia's significant gender bias is widely acknowledged. In this paper we analyze the Spanish Wik...
Contributing to the writing of history has never been as easy as it is today thanks to Wikipedia, a ...
Wikipedia is an important source of information in today's world. Yet, the lack of gender diversity ...
Wikipedia is virtually uncontested as an instrumental conduit for global knowledge exchange. But who...
Opt-in surveys are the most widespread method used to study participation in online communities, but...
The Wikipedia project constitutes the currently most-used and most comprehensive online encyclopedia...
As a global, multilingual project, Wikipedia could serve as a repository for the world's knowledge o...
This paper studies the conversations behind the operations of a large-scale, online knowledge produc...
<div><p>Opt-in surveys are the most widespread method used to study participation in online communit...
International audienceResearch has identified a significant gender gap on the online encyclopedia, W...
Wikipedia has rapidly become an invaluable destination for mil-lions of information-seeking users. H...
This study compared gender across 289 language editions of Wikipedia. First, we analyzed the extent ...
Wikipedia's contributor population contains a significant gender gap: only about 8.5% of Wikipedia's...
In 2010, UNU-MERIT researchers surveyed editors of Wikipedia, “the online encyclopedia that anyone c...
Feminist STS has long established that science's provenance as a male domain continues to define wha...
Wikipedia's significant gender bias is widely acknowledged. In this paper we analyze the Spanish Wik...
Contributing to the writing of history has never been as easy as it is today thanks to Wikipedia, a ...
Wikipedia is an important source of information in today's world. Yet, the lack of gender diversity ...
Wikipedia is virtually uncontested as an instrumental conduit for global knowledge exchange. But who...
Opt-in surveys are the most widespread method used to study participation in online communities, but...
The Wikipedia project constitutes the currently most-used and most comprehensive online encyclopedia...
As a global, multilingual project, Wikipedia could serve as a repository for the world's knowledge o...
This paper studies the conversations behind the operations of a large-scale, online knowledge produc...
<div><p>Opt-in surveys are the most widespread method used to study participation in online communit...