I think the belief that bots cause editor attrition relates to the bots that
"slap the editor in the face" by reverting, writing something critical on
the user's talk page, etc. In the Swedish example, I gather the bots were
creating new articles so they weren't beating up other editors but rather
providing more articles for people to read and add to. I think it's the
"beating up" that causes attrition. We have plenty of editors who are happy
to beat up others, but bots can do it so much more systematically :-(

 

While it's not appropriate to characterise them as Good Bots and Bad Bots
(as the "Bad Bots" do some genuinely useful things and save a lot of work
for humans), it is perhaps reasonable to characterise them as "interacting"
and "non-interacting" and take special care with the interacting ones in
terms of "tone" and, in the spirit of WP:BITE, maybe what they do/say should
be different when dealing with newbies.

 

The paper

 

http://wikipedia-academy.de/2012/w/images/f/f0/13_Paper_Maik_Anderka_Benno_S
tein_Matthias_Busse.pdf

 

showed that article-wide tags like {{refimprove}} were less likely to be
effective than specific inline tags like {{citation needed}}. It's more work
to do {{cn}} (you actually have to read the article) than to say "doesn't
look like enough references for an articles of that size" (which is the
Wikipedia equivalent of assessing student's work by word count) and slap on
a {{refimprove}}. It's no different to being at school and being told "it's
not good enough, do it again", without saying how to do it better. You don't
teach people that way (well, not effectively); you teach people by giving
detailed feedback. Article for Creation has the same problem; the reviewers
reject the article without detailed feedback. At present, the article
creator makes some random changes, crosses their fingers and resubmits, and
usually gets rejected again by a different reviewer often for a different
reason. Eventually the article creator gives up and then we delete the draft
some months later. We are the on-line experts at chewing people up and
spitting them out. Who decides how AfC works? It's established community
members who don't create articles through AfC, and the new editors who do
create articles via AfC only get their "say" by the one method at their
disposal, they give up and walk away.  Hmm, reminds me of 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_taxation_without_representation

 

and look where that ended (given the international readership of this list,
I'll reserve judgement on whether or not it was a good outcome :-) )

 

Personally I think we should look for the simple interventions and
experiment with them and see if they can turn around editor attrition before
we look to the complex interventions (like the fully collaborative editing
environment). It might be far simpler for watchlists to show a couple of
things (I'll leave the specifics to the UX people) 1) that one of the
editors since your last visit is a newbie (maybe this could show in the
relevant entry in the edit history too) and 2) that the last edit was very
recent, suggesting the possibility that someone may be currently editing it
(and hence more likely to create edit conflicts if you go in). I don't how
if it is a simple matter to show that the page is current open for edit (I
suspect not, but don't know the internals of the code), but if it was easy,
that would be an even better thing to signal. We don't need to change how
things work; it might be sufficient to just give clearer signals about
what's going on.

 

I note that this process of signalling is the key to highly scalable insect
behaviour (e.g. ants, termites, bees etc), aka stigmergy. Maybe we should
try a little stigmergy in Wikipedia. Don't change how things work, just
provide humans (and bots) with better information about the situation and
hope they respond more appropriately.

 

Kerry

 

 

  _____  

From: wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Gerard
Meijssen
Sent: Saturday, 27 September 2014 5:48 AM
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] FW: What works for increasing
editorengagement?

 

Hoi,

Did you read this [1] the notion that bots are good for increasing the
number of editors is contentious. However, numbers from the Swedish
Wikipedia experience confirim exactly that bots are good. They not only
increase the number of readers but also the number of editors.. <BIG GRIN>

Thanks,

    GerardM

 

[1]
http://ultimategerardm.blogspot.nl/2014/09/wikipedia-to-bot-or-not-to-bot-ii
.html

 

On 26 September 2014 14:31, WereSpielChequers <werespielchequ...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Scott,

 

That's why the rest of my email focussed on things that we could that would
improve editor retention and which would be uncontentious, but also there is
a third question, are people's assumptions re newbie behaviour true? This is
where research would be useful. Where the problem lies in mutually
contradictory assumptions about user behaviour then the best way to break
the logjam is with research, now I'm confident that the research will
support my assumptions, but if I am wrong then I'm prepared to back
solutions that I have previously opposed.


Regards

 

Jonathan Cardy

 


On 26 Sep 2014, at 09:56, Scott Hale <computermacgy...@gmail.com> wrote:

 

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 1:46 PM, WereSpielChequers
<werespielchequ...@gmail.com> wrote:

Attn Luca and Scott

 

There are some things best avoided as going against community expectations.
I would be happy to see flagged revisions deployed on the English Wikipedia
but I'm well aware that there is a significant lobby against that of people
who believe that it is important that your edit goes live immediately. And
with the community somewhat burned by bad experiences with recent software
changes now would be a bad time to suggest such a controversial change.

 

 

Yes. Completely agree, and that was the exact point of my first email:

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 9:15 AM, Scott Hale <computermacgy...@gmail.com>
wrote:

And that is the fundamental flaw with this whole email thread. The question
needing to be answered isn't "what increases new user retention". The real
question is "what increases new user retention and is acceptable to the most
active/helpful existing users". The second question is much harder than the
first.

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