We investigated how participation evolves in Wikidata as its editors become established members of the community. Originally conceived to support Wikipedia, Wikidata is a collaborative structured knowledge base, created and maintained by a large number of volunteers, whose data can be freely reused in other contexts. Just like in any other online social environment, understanding its contributors’ pathways to full participation helps Wikidata improve user experience and retention.We analysed how participation changes in time under the frameworks of legitimate peripheral participation and activity theory. We found out that as they engage more with the project, “Wikidatians” acquire a higher sense of responsibility for their work, interact mo...
Wikidata is a community-driven knowledge graph which has drawn much attention from researchers and p...
The online encyclopedia Wikipedia can be considered as a highly successful Open Content project, wri...
Many organisations are developing open platforms to create, store and share knowledge. Aleksi Aalton...
We investigated how participation evolves in Wikidata as its editors become established members of t...
Wikidata promises to reduce factual inconsistencies across all Wikipedia language versions. It will ...
International audienceThis paper aims at investigating the process of involvement in open online com...
Traditional activities change in surprising ways when computermediated communication becomes a compo...
In this paper we examine WikiProjects, an emergent, community drivenfeature of Wikipedia. We analyse...
On the occasion of Wikipedia's 10th anniversary, the Chronicle wrote that, nowadays, the project doe...
Wikidata is a collaborative knowledge graph by the Wikimedia Foundation which has undergone an impre...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation ...
AbstractCollaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an ex...
We report a study of Wikipedia in which we use a mixed-methods approach to understand how participat...
Wikipedia edit-a-thon events provide a targeted approach toward incorporating new knowledge into the...
Wikidata is a community-driven knowledge graph which has drawn much attention from researchers and p...
The online encyclopedia Wikipedia can be considered as a highly successful Open Content project, wri...
Many organisations are developing open platforms to create, store and share knowledge. Aleksi Aalton...
We investigated how participation evolves in Wikidata as its editors become established members of t...
Wikidata promises to reduce factual inconsistencies across all Wikipedia language versions. It will ...
International audienceThis paper aims at investigating the process of involvement in open online com...
Traditional activities change in surprising ways when computermediated communication becomes a compo...
In this paper we examine WikiProjects, an emergent, community drivenfeature of Wikipedia. We analyse...
On the occasion of Wikipedia's 10th anniversary, the Chronicle wrote that, nowadays, the project doe...
Wikidata is a collaborative knowledge graph by the Wikimedia Foundation which has undergone an impre...
Wikipedia represents ‘the sum of all human knowledge’ and is becoming the authoritative source on th...
The study of collaboration patterns in wikis can help shed light on the process of content creation ...
AbstractCollaboration in Wikipedia articles has widely been touted as a great leap forward and an ex...
We report a study of Wikipedia in which we use a mixed-methods approach to understand how participat...
Wikipedia edit-a-thon events provide a targeted approach toward incorporating new knowledge into the...
Wikidata is a community-driven knowledge graph which has drawn much attention from researchers and p...
The online encyclopedia Wikipedia can be considered as a highly successful Open Content project, wri...
Many organisations are developing open platforms to create, store and share knowledge. Aleksi Aalton...