2009/9/22 Mike Godwin <mnemo...@gmail.com>: > My own personal view is that, in an ideal world, we'd post two or more > metrics for every project (article numbers, number of editors, and perhaps > other metrics like, perhaps, external links). That would create a design > problem given our current home page, but probably not an unsolvable one. > > The idea here is that, with multiple metrics, we can hypothesize more > clearly about trends -- e.g., when the article number rate of increase > declines, but numbers of editors and external links increases, we may be > able to make some more reasonable guesses about what's happening on that > project. > > Obviously, Erik Zachte's work in this are is extremely (I'm inclined to say > uniquely) valuable -- I'm wondering how we can better integrate his research > into how the projects initially represent themselves to users upon entry.
I don't know if we necessarily need multiple metrics on the home page, but we certainly should be considering multiple metrics. To move from just considering article counts to just considering participants to population ratios would be a very bad idea. Do we have an expert statistician around that can do some regression testing, or similar, and work out what the real relationships are between these various metrics? For examples, what kind of correlation is there actually between number of participants and article creation rates? Does that correlation vary for different sized Wikipedias (and for other projects)? Etc. etc. _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l