Semantic network of Wikipedia pages.
1 2017-02-07T11:04:38-08:00 Josh Lepawsky 31444794f29f45991a28c6c997946216e765688e 6826 3 A semantic network of Wikipedia pages created using SeeAlsoOlogy. plain 2017-02-07T11:09:46-08:00 Josh Lepawsky 31444794f29f45991a28c6c997946216e765688eThis page is referenced by:
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A Detour Through the Wikiweb I.
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A path through the wikiweb.
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In creating the web corpus for all URLs found through our initial Google search queries, Wikipedia articles were included as results in multiple queries. Wikipedia pages, much like the scholarly literature on electronic waste for which a separate corpus was created, require specific and individualized attention given their user accessibility and malleability.
Our initial Google query resulted in 5 Wikipedia entries being included in the corpus:- "Electronic waste"
- "Electronic waste by country"
- "Electronic waste in China"
- "Electronic waste in the United States"
- "Waste picker"
When a user accesses a Wikipedia page they are not presented with a fixed article as they would be with other URLs in our corpus or a scholarly article, but the most recent version of it. Users in addition to being able to access Wikipedia freely also have the ability to create and edit any articles as they see fit. As a result, a Wikipedia article can be taken to be a living artifact undergoing continuous revisions between users holding contesting points of view (POVs) (Borra et al., 2015a). As per Wikipedia’s Core Content Policies, these POVs must be negotiated to present a “neutral point of view” for the article at large “representing significant views fairly, proportionately and without bias” (Wikipedia contributors, 2016). But notice how two substantially different organizations, the Basel Action Network (BAN) and the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), receive an equal number links from Wikipedia articles concerned with e-waste. BAN is an organization with perhaps half a dozen employees and a budget of approximately $1 million. EPA, on the other hand, employs over 15,000 people with a budget exceeding $8 billion. Yet, the two organizations appear of equal significance in the linking behavior of Wikipedia entries on e-waste. This linking behavior of Wikipedia contributors points to how entries can, despite the Core Content Policies, shape disproportionate representations of an issue.