Page values for "Submissions:2023/Readership of Wikipedia"

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"2023_submissions" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
titleStringReadership of Wikipedia
statusStringDeclined
themeStringCredibility / Mis and Disinformation (WikiCred)
typeStringLecture
abstractWikitext

Wikipedia is the world's single most requested, published, accessed, and consulted source of information on almost every topic among most people who use the Internet to seek information. Despite this popularity, something is off and odd about how the public and institutions react to Wikipedia. If Wikipedia is so popular as a general reference resource, then why do individuals and institutions not react to Wikipedia with respect proportional to its influence? For example, why do cultural institutions, universities, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies make great investments to share general reference information in less popular channels like social media, websites, and traditional broadcasting, while neglecting to consider what they could accomplish more easily at lower cost through Wikipedia?

In this talk I present a preprint literature review titled, "Readership of Wikipedia". Beyond the evidence of that paper, I share Wikipedia community perspectives on audience metrics, Wikimedian in Residence roles for engaging Wikipedia, and make some comparisons between Wikipedia editing and comparable off-wiki communication industry professional services.

authorStringLane Rasberry
emailList of Email, delimiter: ,lane@bluerasberry.com
usernameStringbluerasberry
affiliatesStringSchool of Data Science, University of Virginia
timeString15-30 minutes
requestsWikitext
presentedWikitext

no

livestreamBooleanYes
videoString