Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-24 Thread Jane Darnell
Stuart,
Yes there are lots of institutions we could work with, given the proper funding 
and volunteers to monitor efforts. However, we can also use the GLAM contacts 
we already have. I believe the proper channel to propose something like this is 
the Wikiproject Women artists. We need to be careful though about partner 
selection, because we don't want to get involved in political discussions with 
activist groups. The Guerrilla girls don't seem to be an institution, but more 
a group of performance artists. When you look at GLAMs that we have worked with 
in the past, generally the work relationships are through image donations 
and/or data donations. I advocate using the lists we already have access to as 
a basis for making statements about black holes  in our data. Making a 
statement about how many women vs. men there are in any given list of names 
(french engravers, dutch architects, and so forth) is useless, because those 
lists are not based on any finite list from an institution. When you publish a 
list of french engravers in the collection of the British library  then you 
can make valid statements about that specific set of data.

I am a bit unclear about what you mean about a non-straight-white-male-wheel, 
because the list I published is from the PCF (via Magnus) and there is nothing 
about it that re-invents a wheel (though we should probably be doing that 
anyway as well).

Jane

On Feb 23, 2014, at 8:06 PM, Stuart A. Yeates wrote:

 Not discounting the excellent points made above, I can't help but feel that 
 there are groups that have been fighting discrimination in institutions for 
 decades and that maybe we need to work with them rather than reinvent a 
 non-straight-white-male-wheel ourselves. People like 
 http://womenintheartsfoundation.org/ , http://www.guerrillagirls.com/ , 
 http://www.ifuw.org/ , etc. It seems to me like the kind of activity that WMF 
 might have funds for.
 
 cheers
 stuart
 
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Jane Darnell
Funny you should interpret me that way. I think my point is twofold; namely 
Wikipedia is only a reflection of its sources, and that it's sources show an 
odd set of demographics no matter how you slice and dice the data.

Sent from my iPad

On Feb 23, 2014, at 2:59 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com wrote:

 Jane Darnell, 22/02/2014 23:23:
 [...]he amount of art in the museum is
 overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French [...]
 
 The horror! Those Italians, Dutch and French should really be ashamed of all 
 the unjust advantage they amassed in centuries of abusive domination of the 
 western arts.
 More seriously speaking, I have no en.wiki or art competence to judge the 
 editorial activity here described, but watch yourself when you use 
 expressions which make it /sound/ like advocacy for some sort of affirmative 
 action for underrepresented painters, or rationing of arts' tastes, or arts 
 export quotas as for milk. You may do damage to your cause.
 
 Nemo
 
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Laura Hale
I would love to know more about the damage, and what research has been done
on the negative impacts of bringing awareness to the issues of a lack of
representation of both women as contributors and as subjects of article has
done to the cause of increasing this.  The limited research on this subject
that I have seen suggests that by bringing up this issue, the response has
actually included a large backlash against women by males from since inside
the community and by members of the media.  At the same time, there is a
new body of research emerging that women by being silent in response to
misogynistic  trolling are in some ways rewarding the behavior that awards
the negative performance which further encourages additional harassment of
women.

Indeed, based on observations I have of the community and in talking to
other female contributors, the current environment on Wikipedia for women
is to engage in performance activities that suggest they are male so as to
avoid the type of attention that otherwise retards female participation in
the project, and to otherwise submerge identity, refuse to claim credit for
success and otherwise render this area invisible.  This requirement for
female engagement to be expressly male (either by assuming a male identity,
or by modeling oneself after successful male contributors) would actually
be interesting to research in terms of motivational issues for female
participation on Wikipedia, and the goal of the Wikimedia Foundation in
increasing overall participation on the project.

Sincerely,
Laura Hale

On Saturday, February 22, 2014, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Jane Darnell, 22/02/2014 23:23:

 [...]he amount of art in the museum is
 overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French [...]


 The horror! Those Italians, Dutch and French should really be ashamed of
 all the unjust advantage they amassed in centuries of abusive domination of
 the western arts.

More seriously speaking, I have no en.wiki or art competence to judge the
 editorial activity here described, but watch yourself when you use
 expressions which make it /sound/ like advocacy for some sort of
 affirmative action for underrepresented painters, or rationing of arts'
 tastes, or arts export quotas as for milk. You may do damage to your cause.




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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Jane Darnell
Laura,
I am of course only a sample of one, but in my experience based on the issues 
discussed at length in workshops and on the gendergap mailing list, often what 
is perceived to be anti-female behavior is enough to drive women away. Men, 
when perceiving anti-male behavior tend to do the opposite, namely they become 
aggressive and stand their ground. The key way to entice more women to 
contribute is to give them the tips and tricks they need to
1) feel their contribution is appreciated
2) see their contributions are reused in the normal ways of wiki magic

The main problem with keeping women on board is because men are more tech-savvy 
in general and can get both points much easier than women, who see both points 
much more easily on fb, pinterest, and other social media sites.

Jane
Sent from my iPad

On Feb 23, 2014, at 10:13 AM, Laura Hale la...@fanhistory.com wrote:

 I would love to know more about the damage, and what research has been done 
 on the negative impacts of bringing awareness to the issues of a lack of 
 representation of both women as contributors and as subjects of article has 
 done to the cause of increasing this.  The limited research on this subject 
 that I have seen suggests that by bringing up this issue, the response has 
 actually included a large backlash against women by males from since inside 
 the community and by members of the media.  At the same time, there is a new 
 body of research emerging that women by being silent in response to 
 misogynistic  trolling are in some ways rewarding the behavior that awards 
 the negative performance which further encourages additional harassment of 
 women.
 
 Indeed, based on observations I have of the community and in talking to other 
 female contributors, the current environment on Wikipedia for women is to 
 engage in performance activities that suggest they are male so as to avoid 
 the type of attention that otherwise retards female participation in the 
 project, and to otherwise submerge identity, refuse to claim credit for 
 success and otherwise render this area invisible.  This requirement for 
 female engagement to be expressly male (either by assuming a male identity, 
 or by modeling oneself after successful male contributors) would actually be 
 interesting to research in terms of motivational issues for female 
 participation on Wikipedia, and the goal of the Wikimedia Foundation in 
 increasing overall participation on the project.  
 
 Sincerely,
 Laura Hale
 
 On Saturday, February 22, 2014, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 Jane Darnell, 22/02/2014 23:23:
 [...]he amount of art in the museum is
 overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French [...]
 
 The horror! Those Italians, Dutch and French should really be ashamed of all 
 the unjust advantage they amassed in centuries of abusive domination of the 
 western arts.
 More seriously speaking, I have no en.wiki or art competence to judge the 
 editorial activity here described, but watch yourself when you use 
 expressions which make it /sound/ like advocacy for some sort of affirmative 
 action for underrepresented painters, or rationing of arts' tastes, or arts 
 export quotas as for milk. You may do damage to your cause.
 
 
 
 -- 
 twitter: purplepopple
 
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)

Jane Darnell, 23/02/2014 10:37:

Men, when perceiving anti-male behavior tend to do the
opposite, namely they become aggressive and stand their ground.


True, and in laughable ways even. Is such an attitude, however, so 
peculiarly true of this male label, which seems so secondary and 
useless? The males under siege attitude I sometimes saw (never on 
Wikimedia projects though) is ludicrous and looks crazy fanaticism.
	However, earlier this morning, I experienced something like that with 
Jane's observations. The hint that I may be considered evil for the 
shameful underrepresentation of non-Italian (or even non-Ariosto/Tasso) 
ottava rima poems authors in my personal library... made me feel under 
attack. And I bite back automatically. Suddenly I understood how one can 
stupidly feel attacked for one's own inner self.
	It would be interesting to know more about such social dynamics in a 
more general way. They're certainly not new, see e.g. an Ariosto example 
in Walter Scott's Waverley, chapter 54.



The key
way to entice more women to contribute is to give them the tips and
tricks [...]


Sounds like warfare and trenches. The real solution is making people not 
feel attacked, not making your attacks stronger or more subtle.
	Like, admit that a user writing about underrepresented painters is 
just the ordinary story of a volunteer who contributes to a wiki with 
the bias of their own personal interests, because that's how volunteers 
and wikis work, compensated by the other people's interests, NPOV, NOR 
etc. The same story as with users exclusively writing about [male] 
catholic bishops, [male] soccer, [ungendered?] pokémons, or [mixed!] 
English modernists writers. (Though I intimately and strongly despise 
the first three, and I do the latter.)
	Unilateral proclaims of one's own higher moral and intellectual stance 
rarely result into durable peace treaties.


Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Jane Darnell
Nemo, that is so cool you said that, because it proves as I have long suspected 
that I have developed some sort of blind eye to such things. I recognized your 
snippy response as only being a knee-jerk reaction to a perceived anti-Italian 
remark, not to an anti-male remark! 

Anyway as I said in my first mail in this thread I am also reacting to a 
self-interpreted attack for being perceived for the shameful 
underrepresentation on women's topics (I think way less than 10% of what I have 
contributed onwiki is female-oriented). For the record, I am a huge Glam fan 
and  i think Caravaggio rocks, so don't shoot me for these observations, which 
are I think fascinating. I will continue to compile these lists on museum 
collections, because exploring the data of the institutions Wikipedia bases its 
own content on is important to our understanding of the perceived biases.

I am somewhat confused about your comment on warfare and trenches. I simply 
advocate one-on-one coaching of women in the tips and tricks that male 
contributors discover easily on their own.

Like you I am also interested in learning more about such social dynamics and 
feel a yearly editor survey would be a good place to start.
Jane


Sent from my iPad

On Feb 23, 2014, at 12:44 PM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com wrote:

 Jane Darnell, 23/02/2014 10:37:
 Men, when perceiving anti-male behavior tend to do the
 opposite, namely they become aggressive and stand their ground.
 
 True, and in laughable ways even. Is such an attitude, however, so peculiarly 
 true of this male label, which seems so secondary and useless? The males 
 under siege attitude I sometimes saw (never on Wikimedia projects though) is 
 ludicrous and looks crazy fanaticism.
However, earlier this morning, I experienced something like that with 
 Jane's observations. The hint that I may be considered evil for the shameful 
 underrepresentation of non-Italian (or even non-Ariosto/Tasso) ottava rima 
 poems authors in my personal library... made me feel under attack. And I bite 
 back automatically. Suddenly I understood how one can stupidly feel attacked 
 for one's own inner self.
It would be interesting to know more about such social dynamics in a more 
 general way. They're certainly not new, see e.g. an Ariosto example in Walter 
 Scott's Waverley, chapter 54.
 
 The key
 way to entice more women to contribute is to give them the tips and
 tricks [...]
 
 Sounds like warfare and trenches. The real solution is making people not feel 
 attacked, not making your attacks stronger or more subtle.
Like, admit that a user writing about underrepresented painters is just 
 the ordinary story of a volunteer who contributes to a wiki with the bias of 
 their own personal interests, because that's how volunteers and wikis work, 
 compensated by the other people's interests, NPOV, NOR etc. The same story as 
 with users exclusively writing about [male] catholic bishops, [male] soccer, 
 [ungendered?] pokémons, or [mixed!] English modernists writers. (Though I 
 intimately and strongly despise the first three, and I do the latter.)
Unilateral proclaims of one's own higher moral and intellectual stance 
 rarely result into durable peace treaties.
 
 Nemo
 
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Jane Darnell
David,
I think we are both on the same page, but I am a bit farther in my thinking 
about HOW you can illustrate the biases. The mobile team coined the phrase 
'ghost edits' to mean the edits we don't make while on mobile devices (I am on 
my iPad right now and experienced a ghost edit which will definitely not get 
done now because I don't care about it enough).

We need another term for the edits that are never considered, because we don't 
have the people to even make those 'ghost' considerations. By creating lists of 
topics and working with Wikidata, we can eventually make statements possible 
such as in the 20th century, Harvard only appointed x women to full 
professorship, an x percentage of the faculty, which compares favorably or not 
to the Sorbonne, etc.
Jane
Sent from my iPad

On Feb 23, 2014, at 11:38 AM, David Monniaux david.monni...@free.fr wrote:

 was expected to marry and have children,
 instead of becoming a professionnal musician.)
 
 We cannot repair the unfairness of centuries past, but we can certainly
 try avoiding selection bias on top of it.

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-23 Thread Stuart A. Yeates
Not discounting the excellent points made above, I can't help but feel that
there are groups that have been fighting discrimination in institutions for
decades and that maybe we need to work with them rather than reinvent a
non-straight-white-male-wheel ourselves. People like
http://womenintheartsfoundation.org/ , http://www.guerrillagirls.com/ ,
http://www.ifuw.org/ , etc. It seems to me like the kind of activity that
WMF might have funds for.

cheers
stuart
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-22 Thread Jane Darnell
Thanks Kerry! I have been working on lists of painters per museum
collection in order to show how few women artists are represented in
major collections. With all of the work we do for GLAMS, it is
interesting to note that they themselves are highly successful at
perpetuating systemic bias.

Magnus is able to collect data on all the museums on the BBC's Your
Paintings website, and with his data I just created a list of
painters of the National Gallery, London. I was surprised to see that
there is not even one female artist from Britain represented (though
the British men are also underepresented, with only 18 out of 750
names). Lists like these can help generate demographic data for all
sorts of diversity issues, as the amount of art in the museum is
overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French, without any
art at all from areas outside Europe.

The list is here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalog_of_paintings_in_the_National_Gallery,_London

2014-02-21 8:32 GMT+01:00, David Monniaux david.monni...@free.fr:
 And, indeed, I see your point. For historical/older information, it is
 indeed difficult to write about women's sports because these topics were
 not widely covered on paper (newspapers, books) but for current teams,
 at least for factual information, there is a large quantity of
 information online.

 Indeed, if one is interested in France's national soccer team, one can
 probably get considerably more information online than through
 conventional media (which, at least in France, covers female sports very
 little, except in special events such as the Olympics).

 Things are different with e.g. writers, since discussion on them tends
 to come from academics and literary-type newspapers. There is no
 equivalent to having factual databases of team rosters.

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-22 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)

Jane Darnell, 22/02/2014 23:23:

[...]he amount of art in the museum is
overwhelmingly Italian, Dutch/Netherlandish, and French [...]


The horror! Those Italians, Dutch and French should really be ashamed of 
all the unjust advantage they amassed in centuries of abusive domination 
of the western arts.
More seriously speaking, I have no en.wiki or art competence to judge 
the editorial activity here described, but watch yourself when you use 
expressions which make it /sound/ like advocacy for some sort of 
affirmative action for underrepresented painters, or rationing of arts' 
tastes, or arts export quotas as for milk. You may do damage to your cause.


Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-20 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)

Stuart A. Yeates, 18/02/2014 01:48:

What would be great would be a set survey of the top 5000 (i.e. the
group that Laura is already working with) where they were asked basic
questions about the fields they edited in and their perception of gender
bias, then half way through they were presented with their rating by
Laura's work,  then another set of questions relating to gender bias.

Suitably phrased questions could be used to discover:
(a) whether they're a priori aware of the apparent bias
(b) whether they are surprised at the gender balance in their articles
discovered by Laura's work
(c) whether they see the gender balance as an issue
(d) whether they are aware of any untapped or under-utilised resources
for women's articles in their fields
(e) whether they are interested in working to combat apparent bias



As a fallback to serious research, a handful questions may be added to 
the next editors' survey whenever one happens. I recommend to copy this 
suggestion to a suitable Meta-Wiki page (e.g. 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:General_User_Survey) so that it 
stays available for the years to come.


Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-20 Thread David Monniaux
Your example of sports is very interesting. I agree that above a certain
level, any team etc. is inherently notable. There is still, however, the
question of available sources,

I'm not a sports connoisseur, but if I go to a typical library, there is
a range of books on popular *male* sports. I can find biographies of
famous players, histories of major clubs, etc. A quick Amazon search for
instance shows me that they have a book on sale about the successes of
AS Saint-Etienne in the French football (that's soccer for Americans)
championship in 1976!

I do not find such books on female sports. In fact, if I look for a book
on the French women's soccer team on Amazon, I find something...
extracted from Wikipedia! (Recall that football is the most popular
sport in France...)

In short, for certain topics (e.g. male sports), there is a gazillion
books, biographies, and other source material readily available, while
for others (e.g. female sports) such sources are more difficult to find.

What I would like to understand is how much the bias is caused by such
imbalances in sources. A possible evaluation method would be to consider
female and male personalities (e.g. writers) equal in notoriety (e.g.
according to scholars from that field), and to compare the length and
quality of the biographies. What do you think?

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-20 Thread Stuart A. Yeates
On Fri, Feb 21, 2014 at 7:55 AM, David Monniaux david.monni...@free.frwrote:


 I do not find such books on female sports. In fact, if I look for a book
 on the French women's soccer team on Amazon, I find something...
 extracted from Wikipedia! (Recall that football is the most popular
 sport in France...)

 In short, for certain topics (e.g. male sports), there is a gazillion
 books, biographies, and other source material readily available, while
 for others (e.g. female sports) such sources are more difficult to find.

 What I would like to understand is how much the bias is caused by such
 imbalances in sources. A possible evaluation method would be to consider
 female and male personalities (e.g. writers) equal in notoriety (e.g.
 according to scholars from that field), and to compare the length and
 quality of the biographies. What do you think?


A couple of confounding factors:
(a) Historically many talented women writers have written as men (or using
a house pseudonym).

(b) Historically serials have bee consumed disproportionately by women and
books by men. Historically libraries index book content but not serial
content by subject. Thus material written for a female audience has lower
visibility, even to writers in the field, because it's so much harder to
find.

cheers
stuart
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-20 Thread Laura Hale
On Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 7:55 PM, David Monniaux david.monni...@free.frwrote:


 I'm not a sports connoisseur, but if I go to a typical library, there is
 a range of books on popular *male* sports. I can find biographies of
 famous players, histories of major clubs, etc. A quick Amazon search for
 instance shows me that they have a book on sale about the successes of
 AS Saint-Etienne in the French football (that's soccer for Americans)
 championship in 1976!


On the issue of notability and availability of men's versus women's top
level teams, there are a number of issues at play. There are regional
notability issues that make sourcing even more difficult, and then biases
by a dominant editing pool that become enshrined.  (Look at the men's
football league notability guidelines.)  There might be a lot of sources
about Norwegian women fútbol  players in Norwegian newspapers.  These
sources may be online, and easily accessible to anyone looking at Norwegian
language newspapers.  But there is an inherent bias against automatic
notability for leagues and players from non-English speaking countries,
where English speaking players are not playing, and where English speaking
fans are not following the league.




 I do not find such books on female sports. In fact, if I look for a book
 on the French women's soccer team on Amazon, I find something...
 extracted from Wikipedia! (Recall that football is the most popular
 sport in France...)


But most sports people I know wouldn't make their first stop at a bookstore
unless they were looking for historical information. Most of the sport
related activity happens around current players.  Hence, newspaper sources
tend to be relied on heavily.



 In short, for certain topics (e.g. male sports), there is a gazillion
 books, biographies, and other source material readily available, while
 for others (e.g. female sports) such sources are more difficult to find.


In the case of sports and for the most highly visible (re: national teams),
this is not an issue of readily available but the relative volume of one
compared to another.
http://www.google.com/trends/explore?hl=en-USq=/m/01l3vx,+/m/06drlzcmpt=qcontent=1is
the Google trends for the French men's national team versus the
women's
national team. I went to Google news and searched for french men national
soccer team and had 57,000 results.  I searched for french women national
soccer team and had 43,200 results.  There is not an availability of
sources issue.  In fact, there is likely so much information that you
actually need to filter.  The basics for national teams for many sports can
also generally be filled out by the sport's governing bodies.  (FIFA is
really, really excellent in this regards.  FIBA is also great.)

I personally think that this is often an excuse because for certain topics,
the sources are there but people are not utilizing them to create articles
about women while they are out there creating them about men. Or when they
aren't as accessible for both men and women, people are willing to go the
extra length to try to create articles about the men's national team.  A
quick search on Google news for Gabon men's national basketball team pulls
up zero results.  Another search for Gabon women's national basketball team
pulls up zero results. Guess which team has an article on English Wikipedia?

And how big of a role does that play anyway in article creation?  A while
back, I looked at the Australian women's national soccer team players
versus the men's national team players.   There were an average of 6.7
sources on women's articles and 19.6 for men.  Women's articles are more
poorly sourced when looked at head to head, and I can guarantee you there
is waay more available sources to take all articles about both sets all
to FA if people were motivated, but no one appears to be motivated enough
to do so even with available sources.

I would love to see research on source availability as a factor leading to
the lack of creation of articles about women in head to head situations
with their direct male counterparts.

Sincerely,
Laura Hale



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-20 Thread David Monniaux
And, indeed, I see your point. For historical/older information, it is
indeed difficult to write about women's sports because these topics were
not widely covered on paper (newspapers, books) but for current teams,
at least for factual information, there is a large quantity of
information online.

Indeed, if one is interested in France's national soccer team, one can
probably get considerably more information online than through
conventional media (which, at least in France, covers female sports very
little, except in special events such as the Olympics).

Things are different with e.g. writers, since discussion on them tends
to come from academics and literary-type newspapers. There is no
equivalent to having factual databases of team rosters.

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-17 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)
Given that the discussion is all happening here anyway, I'll copy the 
comment I left on the blog. :)




Nemo February 16, 2014 at 2:43 pm   

Your comment is awaiting moderation.

Interesting trivia to munch, but little nutritional value IMHO. Everyone 
in every field always complains that there are too many articles about 
pokémon and French municipalities, too few about X very important 
topic/aspect. All such considerations are worthless because they don’t 
consider the actual relative *impact* of those articles, e.g. how many 
other people edited or discussed them after creation and how many page 
views they had.


One could even argue that the “perception problems related to Wikipedia 
being male and cliquey” is made worse by posts like this, ;) but that 
would be trolling. I don’t see how the mere number of articles on one 
topic or another is going to make Wikipedia feel “too male” or 
“anti-female” to a normal user who certainly doesn’t notice such things. 
If you have to dig for it, it doesn’t contribute to public perception; 
at most it can be a possible symptom of something else that may be 
contributing to public perception.


Even disregarding the impact, to assess the bias of the contributors 
themselves a more precise research, comparative in nature, would be 
needed. For instance, if one writes articles on parliament members in 
country X, and 70 % of articles are about males, that’s only biased if 
the actual percentage of male MP is less than 70 %. The same should be 
done with all the sources for each topic.


And it’s nothing compared to the systemic bias towards the western and 
anglo-saxon point of view which writing in English and using (mostly 
online) English sources encourages, let alone languages less global in 
nature.


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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-17 Thread Stuart A. Yeates
On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 9:34 AM, Samuel Klein meta...@gmail.com wrote:

 Why do you want categories in the first place?  Why not extract
 whatever semantic meaning you need (e.g., about genderbread) by
 parsing the sentences in each article?


Because for most people gender is a private matter which never makes it
into their article because being a private matter there are no reliable
sources about it?

 Coming from a Western, English-language point of view it's very easy to
  create structures that declare groups of people such as fa'afafine
 incapable
  of existing.

 ... so many assumptions you just made there :-)


Yes, but I happen to know they're all true; because I was speaking of
myself.


 Why is this a problem?
 The attribute gender according to DNB is a) useful historical data,
 b) verifiable, and c) easy to add to wikidata. I believe you can have
 DNB-gender as one of the variations on the global gender
 attribute.  Most articles (unless they are talking about the DNB
 specifically) would likely refer to the global attribute.  But this
 way you can have both datasets globally accessible.  Then after the
 import is done, people can write bulk data-cleaning scripts to help
 humans review those articles where the two differ.  And in cases where
 there is a years-long edit war about what the global attribute should
 be, you can keep track of what the input source-data is from various
 sources.


I'm primarily an en.wiki editor and frankly don't care about wikidata,
except as it affects en.wiki.

What I am sure of is that 'gender' on en.wiki defaulting to DNB-gender
unless the individual has spoken about their gender in reliable sources is
inappropriate. Not only does it breach WP:BLP, but by white-washing
minorities it is a travesty of [[Wikipedia:Systemic bias]].

cheers
stuart
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-17 Thread Stuart A. Yeates
On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 9:44 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.comwrote:


 Even disregarding the impact, to assess the bias of the contributors
 themselves a more precise research, comparative in nature, would be needed.
 For instance, if one writes articles on parliament members in country X,
 and 70 % of articles are about males, that’s only biased if the actual
 percentage of male MP is less than 70 %. The same should be done with all
 the sources for each topic.


I disagree with this. If one is using biased sourced (such as a list which
is 70% male) it is one's responsibility to match that, where possible, with
other sources to counteract that bias. IMHO.


 And it’s nothing compared to the systemic bias towards the western and
 anglo-saxon point of view which writing in English and using (mostly
 online) English sources encourages, let alone languages less global in
 nature.


I completely agree with you.

cheers
stuart
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] The role of English Wikipedia's top content creators in perpetuating gender bias

2014-02-17 Thread Stuart A. Yeates


 I agree it is difficult in Wikipedia to:
 * measure bias in number, size, quality of articles
 * correlate bias in articles to skewed demographics of editors contributing
 to those articles (probably adjusted by frequency, size, or nature of
 edits)
 * determine if editors creating observable bias in the articles are doing
 so
 deliberately or unconsciously
 * postulate ways to address the bias

 But since we are here to discuss research, then let's discuss what would be
 a set of experiments that would help to answer these questions?



What would be great would be a set survey of the top 5000 (i.e. the group
that Laura is already working with) where they were asked basic questions
about the fields they edited in and their perception of gender bias, then
half way through they were presented with their rating by Laura's work,
 then another set of questions relating to gender bias.

Suitably phrased questions could be used to discover:
(a) whether they're a priori aware of the apparent bias
(b) whether they are surprised at the gender balance in their articles
discovered by Laura's work
(c) whether they see the gender balance as an issue
(d) whether they are aware of any untapped or under-utilised resources for
women's articles in their fields
(e) whether they are interested in working to combat apparent bias


cheers
stuart
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