Lo and behold, Wiki-heathens!

Aphex_Twin

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Joined
Sep 7, 2002
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7,474
Hey, if the BBC says it's true :)

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Wikipedia survives research test
John Seigenthaler Sr, AP

The free online resource Wikipedia is about as accurate on science as the Encyclopedia Britannica, a study shows.

The British journal Nature examined a range of scientific entries on both works of reference and found few differences in accuracy.

Wikipedia is produced by volunteers, who add entries and edit any page.

But it has been criticised for the correctness of entries, most recently over the biography of prominent US journalist John Seigenthaler.

Open approach

Wikipedia was founded in 2001 and has since grown to more than 1.8 million articles in 200 languages. Some 800,000 entries are in English.

It is based on wikis, open-source software which lets anyone fiddle with a webpage, anyone reading a subject entry can disagree, edit, add, delete, or replace the entry.


We're very pleased with the results and we're hoping it will focus people's attention on the overall level of our work, which is pretty good
Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder
It relies on 13,000 volunteer contributors, many of whom are experts in a particular field, to edit previously submitted articles.

In order to test its reliability, Nature conducted a peer review of scientific entries on Wikipedia and the well-established Encyclopedia Britannica.

The reviewers were asked to check for errors, but were not told about the source of the information.

"Only eight serious errors, such as misinterpretations of important concepts, were detected in the pairs of articles reviewed, four from each encyclopedia," reported Nature.

"But reviewers also found many factual errors, omissions or misleading statements: 162 and 123 in Wikipedia and Britannica, respectively."

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales welcomed the study.

"We're hoping it will focus people's attention on the overall level of our work, which is pretty good," he said.

Writing style

Nature said its reviewers found that Wikipedia entries were often poorly structured and confused.

The Encyclopedia Britannica declined to comment directly on the findings; but a spokesman highlighted the quality of the entries on the free resource.

"But it is not the case that errors creep in on an occasional basis or that a couple of articles are poorly written," Tom Panelas, director of corporate communications is quoted as saying in Nature.

"There are lots of articles in that condition. They need a good editor."

Wikipedia came under fire earlier this month from prominent US journalist John Seigenthaler.

The founding editorial director of USA Today attacked a Wikipedia entry that incorrectly named him as a suspect in the assassinations of president John F Kennedy and his brother, Robert.

The false information was the work of Tennessean Brian Chase, who said he was trying to trick a co-worker.

Wikipedia has responded to the criticisms by tightening up procedures.

Next month it plans to begin testing a new mechanism for reviewing the accuracy of its articles.

Source
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Now, it doesn't mean the ancient art of source cross-referencing died. But overall, do you think Wikipedia is a bad source of information?
 
Its a good starting point and what I've read seems accurate enough but the articles may focus quite a lot on the basic facts which leads to some of the articles being quite dry and less of an enjoyable read than a book may be on the subject.

"But reviewers also found many factual errors, omissions or misleading statements: 162 and 123 in Wikipedia and Britannica, respectively."

Nature said its reviewers found that Wikipedia entries were often poorly structured and confused.

So even the article has some significant criticisms of Wiki.
 
I realize it isn't science related, but I came across this and had to post it somewhere, so I searched for a wiki thread and this popped up.

:crazyeye: David Hasselhoff's Wiki entry, second paragraph:
Role in ending communism

During a tour of West Germany in 1989, The HOFF single-handedly tore down the Berlin Wall in seven minutes flat, reuniting Germany, sparking the fall of communism in Europe and the end of the Cold War.

Now, you may be asking yourself, what the heck is VR doing reading about David Hasselhoff. Well, I was trying to think of a reason for Europe to hate America (a current thread topic), and it occured to me that it may be because they finally figured out that he can't sing and are angry for being duped for so long.
 
I use it to gain a basic knowledge of the subject but as dell said books on it are far more enjoyable to read.
 
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