Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-08-01 Thread Kerry Raymond
I agree that researchers do not value the time of their subjects. But
Wikipedia does not own the time of its volunteers; the volunteers choose to
give it to Wikipedia and they may choose to give it to surveys and they may
choose to watch Game of Thrones. Wikipedia can't lose what it did not own;
it can only be grateful for what is freely given. Ditto for researchers.

 

As I have previously stated, Wikipedia is within its rights to control the
use of its communication channels in relation to promoting research surveys,
because it does own those resources.

 

Kerry

 

 

  _  

From: wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Lane
Rasberry
Sent: Saturday, 2 August 2014 12:41 AM
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

 

 

@Piotr

Lane, how many survey requests do you get per year? And how much time do
you spend on them?

 

Perhaps I got 10 survey requests, and perhaps 10 interview requests in the
past year which were not obviously related to my outreach work or which I
sought to have. I work in Wikipedia outreach and talk to a lot of people in
that capacity too. I make myself visible.

 

I rarely complete surveys, and maybe have only done 5 in the last year with
most or all of those being ones that I found rather than that found me.

 

I am contacted for being a certain kind of Wikipedian, and not for being any
Wikipedian. People ask me about medicine, LGBT topics, paid editing or
Wikipedian in Residence things. Unusually, I give my phone number and Skype
out to a lot of people and do more Wikipedia discussion by voice than
on-wiki or with typing. I do not know any other Wikipedian who says this.

 

Those who don't want, don't take part in the survey. where's that
disruption? What am I missing?

 

There is a historical precedent in human subject research which says that
researchers cannot depend on their subjects to protect themselves, because
this is presumed to always lead to unacceptable risk of harm to the
subjects. Just saying that people can refuse surveys is out of bounds of
contemporary research in western cultures. Some third party oversight from
somewhere is necessary. I have no opinion about whether the Wikipedia
community or WMF could provide that, but my initial thought is that if
researchers follow their own institution's guidelines then things should be
okay.

 

The most usual disruption is that the pool of researchers is large in
comparison to the pool of people who could respond to surveys and
interviews. Practically all researchers assume that it does not disrupt
anything to ask, but there is a lot of asking and it is not obvious that
Wikimedia community infrastructure should be used to serve people who are
using it in ways that might be disturbing advancement of the Wikimedia
mission.

 

@Kerry

 32K active editors ( 5 edits per month) 3K very active editors (100
edits per month).

 Or have I missed something here? Are researchers only interested in people
who have been on Wikipedia for 10+ years with 10M edits or .?

 

No, you have it exactly! It is not the Wikipedia for 10+ years with 10M
edits or that matters, but rather it is making any further distinction. A
researcher who wants any demographic, like women, gay people, an ethnic
minority, editors in a certain topic area, people who do a certain function
like AfD, people who have had a certain problem, or many other things will
cut the pool of 3000 down to 300. I would love for researchers to research
those people doing 5-100 edits a month, but there is no way to reach this
group and researchers rarely or never are interested in this group. Those
3000 are the ones I want to have protection because they are not a single
group, but rather are lots of small groups each serving an important role. A
typical survey is relevant to at most 10% of that 3000, meaning the
potential research pool is rarely above 300 people. If the interviewer is
imagining a research pool of 10,000 or more - which is the usual case - then
they would be bold in trying to recruit and take time even though only 300
people could possibly respond. If they get 10% of the possible pool, which
is an amazing response, then that could mean 30 responses and not enough to
have valid results if the researcher hoped for 1% of 10,000. Also, when only
300 people do a task any time away from that is valuable time lost, and if
researchers expected a larger pool, they may not be so careful with the
volunteer's time. As researchers almost always come to Wikipedia completely
as community outsiders, they almost always undervalue volunteer time here.

 

 

 

On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:39 PM, Piotr Konieczny pio...@post.pl wrote:

Lane, how many survey requests do you get per year? And how much time do you
spend on them?

Because myself, being in the Top 100 most active editors and thus I'd think
fitting in your group

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-31 Thread Aaron Halfaker
For example, this proposal[1] was sent to me last year.  The researcher's
plan was not to sample from the pool of active editors, but instead to
contact the 500 *most active Wikipedians* on enwiki to survey them about
their motivations.  There were several concerns raised about (1) whether
the proposed study was duplicating prior work, (2) why the busiest editors
needed to be surveyed and (3) whether the researcher's methodology would
allow for the intended insights to be gained.

Regretfully, the researcher decided not to respond to anyone other than
myself and was also unwilling to work through many of the concerns I raised.

1. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Online_knowledge_sharing

-Aaron


On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 8:19 PM, Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com
wrote:

  30? No wonder we are worried about editor attrition J Seriously,



 http://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/SummaryEN.htm



 shows that in May 2014 on en.WP we had about 32K active editors ( 5 edits
 per month) and 3K very active editors (100 edits per month).



 Or have I missed something here? Are researchers only interested in people
 who have been on Wikipedia for 10+ years with 10M edits or …?



 Kerry


  --

 *From:* wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org [mailto:
 wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] *On Behalf Of *Lane Rasberry
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 July 2014 12:00 PM

 *To:* Research into Wikimedia content and communities
 *Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys



 Hey guys,

 I posted some thoughts to my own blog and am linking to those posts below.
 Everything I say on my blog is captured in the summary below, so feel free
 to not click through.

 

 My biggest worry is that researchers who recruit human subjects assume
 that there are huge numbers of Wikipedians for them to survey, and
 consequently, they do not need to do a lot of advance survey preparation
 because there is no harm from distracting Wikipedians from their usual
 volunteer work. This assumption is wrong because actually almost every
 researcher recruiting human subjects wants Wikipedians who are in very
 short supply. Consequently, researchers do cause harm to the community by
 soliciting for volunteer time, and Wikipedia community benefit is dubious
 when researchers do not do sufficient preparation for their work. This is
 not quite accurate, but if there were one message I could convey to
 researchers, it would be Your research participant pool only consists of
 about 30 super busy people and many other volunteers greatly depend on
 getting their time. When you take time from a Wikipedian, you are taking
 that time away from other volunteers who really need it, so be respectful
 of your intervention in our communities.
 



 I do not want a lot of gatekeeping between researchers and the Wikipedia
 community, but at the same time, researchers should take professional pride
 in their work and take care not to disrupt Wikimedia community activities.


 
 http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/request-for-researchers-when-doing-research-on-the-wikimedia-community/
 
 http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/problems-with-research-on-wikipedia/

 I am still thinking about what should be done with research.

 yours,





 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Dario Taraborelli 
 dtarabore...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 Hi all,



 I am a bit late in the game, but since so many questions were raised about
 RCom, its scope, its goals, the source of its authority etc. and I helped
 coordinate it in the early days I thought I’d chime in to clear some
 confusion.



 *Is RCom an official WMF body or a group of volunteers?*



 RCom was created as a volunteer body to help design policies and best
 practices around research on Wikimedia projects. People who joined the
 committee did so on a volunteer basis and with a variety of interests by
 responding to a call for participation issued by WMF. Despite the fact that
 the original initiative came from WMF, its membership almost entirely
 consisted of non-WMF researchers and community members (those of us who are
 now with Wikimedia had no affiliation with the Foundation when RCom was
 launched [1]). RCom work was and remains 100% volunteer-driven, even for
 those of us who are full-time employees of the Foundation.



 *Is RCom a body regulating subject recruitment?*



 No, subject recruitment was only one among many areas of interest
 identified by its participants [2]



 *Is RCom still alive?*



 RCom stopped working a while ago* as a* *group meeting on a regular basis
 to discuss joint initiatives*. However, it spawned a large number of
 initiatives and workgroups that are still alive and kicking, some of which
 have evolved into other projects that are now only loosely associated with
 RCom. These include reviewing subject recruitment requests, but also the
 Research Newsletter, which has been published monthly for the last 3 years;
 countless

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-31 Thread Kerry Raymond
Well, it seems they took some of your advice. It did say top 500
contributors in its original form, but now says any interested Wikipedia
user.

 

Kerry

 

 

  _  

From: Aaron Halfaker [mailto:aaron.halfa...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, 31 July 2014 10:45 PM
To: Kerry Raymond; Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

 

For example, this proposal[1] was sent to me last year.  The researcher's
plan was not to sample from the pool of active editors, but instead to
contact the 500 most active Wikipedians on enwiki to survey them about their
motivations.  There were several concerns raised about (1) whether the
proposed study was duplicating prior work, (2) why the busiest editors
needed to be surveyed and (3) whether the researcher's methodology would
allow for the intended insights to be gained.   

 

Regretfully, the researcher decided not to respond to anyone other than
myself and was also unwilling to work through many of the concerns I raised.

 

1. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Online_knowledge_sharing

 

-Aaron

 

On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 8:19 PM, Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com
wrote:

30? No wonder we are worried about editor attrition :-) Seriously,

 

http://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/SummaryEN.htm

 

shows that in May 2014 on en.WP we had about 32K active editors ( 5 edits
per month) and 3K very active editors (100 edits per month). 

 

Or have I missed something here? Are researchers only interested in people
who have been on Wikipedia for 10+ years with 10M edits or .?

 

Kerry

 

  _  

From: wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Lane
Rasberry
Sent: Wednesday, 30 July 2014 12:00 PM


To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

 

Hey guys,

I posted some thoughts to my own blog and am linking to those posts below.
Everything I say on my blog is captured in the summary below, so feel free
to not click through.



My biggest worry is that researchers who recruit human subjects assume that
there are huge numbers of Wikipedians for them to survey, and consequently,
they do not need to do a lot of advance survey preparation because there is
no harm from distracting Wikipedians from their usual volunteer work. This
assumption is wrong because actually almost every researcher recruiting
human subjects wants Wikipedians who are in very short supply. Consequently,
researchers do cause harm to the community by soliciting for volunteer time,
and Wikipedia community benefit is dubious when researchers do not do
sufficient preparation for their work. This is not quite accurate, but if
there were one message I could convey to researchers, it would be Your
research participant pool only consists of about 30 super busy people and
many other volunteers greatly depend on getting their time. When you take
time from a Wikipedian, you are taking that time away from other volunteers
who really need it, so be respectful of your intervention in our
communities.


 

I do not want a lot of gatekeeping between researchers and the Wikipedia
community, but at the same time, researchers should take professional pride
in their work and take care not to disrupt Wikimedia community activities.


http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/request-for-researchers-when-doing-research
-on-the-wikimedia-community/
http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/problems-with-research-on-wikipedia/

I am still thinking about what should be done with research.

yours,

 

 

On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Dario Taraborelli
dtarabore...@wikimedia.org wrote:

Hi all,

 

I am a bit late in the game, but since so many questions were raised about
RCom, its scope, its goals, the source of its authority etc. and I helped
coordinate it in the early days I thought I'd chime in to clear some
confusion. 

 

Is RCom an official WMF body or a group of volunteers?

 

RCom was created as a volunteer body to help design policies and best
practices around research on Wikimedia projects. People who joined the
committee did so on a volunteer basis and with a variety of interests by
responding to a call for participation issued by WMF. Despite the fact that
the original initiative came from WMF, its membership almost entirely
consisted of non-WMF researchers and community members (those of us who are
now with Wikimedia had no affiliation with the Foundation when RCom was
launched [1]). RCom work was and remains 100% volunteer-driven, even for
those of us who are full-time employees of the Foundation.

 

Is RCom a body regulating subject recruitment?

 

No, subject recruitment was only one among many areas of interest identified
by its participants [2]

 

Is RCom still alive?

 

RCom stopped working a while ago as a group meeting on a regular basis to
discuss joint initiatives. However, it spawned a large number

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-30 Thread Heather Ford
That is indeed really helpful, thanks for taking the time, Dario!

Heather Ford
Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral Programme
EthnographyMatters http://ethnographymatters.net | Oxford Digital
Ethnography Group http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115
http://hblog.org | @hfordsa http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa




On 29 July 2014 23:00, Dario Taraborelli dtarabore...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 Hi all,

 I am a bit late in the game, but since so many questions were raised about
 RCom, its scope, its goals, the source of its authority etc. and I helped
 coordinate it in the early days I thought I’d chime in to clear some
 confusion.

 *Is RCom an official WMF body or a group of volunteers?*

 RCom was created as a volunteer body to help design policies and best
 practices around research on Wikimedia projects. People who joined the
 committee did so on a volunteer basis and with a variety of interests by
 responding to a call for participation issued by WMF. Despite the fact that
 the original initiative came from WMF, its membership almost entirely
 consisted of non-WMF researchers and community members (those of us who are
 now with Wikimedia had no affiliation with the Foundation when RCom was
 launched [1]). RCom work was and remains 100% volunteer-driven, even for
 those of us who are full-time employees of the Foundation.

 *Is RCom a body regulating subject recruitment?*

 No, subject recruitment was only one among many areas of interest
 identified by its participants [2]

 *Is RCom still alive?*

 RCom stopped working a while ago* as a* *group meeting on a regular basis
 to discuss joint initiatives*. However, it spawned a large number of
 initiatives and workgroups that are still alive and kicking, some of which
 have evolved into other projects that are now only loosely associated with
 RCom. These include reviewing subject recruitment requests, but also the
 Research Newsletter, which has been published monthly for the last 3 years;
 countless initiatives in the area of open access; initiatives to facilitate
 Wikimedia data documentation and data discoverability; hackathons and
 outreach events aimed at bringing together researchers and Wikimedia
 contributors. Subject recruitment reviews and discussions are still
 happening, and I believe they provide a valuable service when you consider
 that they are entirely run by a microscopic number of volunteers. I don’t
 think that the alternative between “either RCom exists and it functions
 effectively or reviews should immediately stop” is well framed or even
 desirable, for the reasons that I explain below.

 *What’s the source of RCom’s authority in reviewing subject recruitment
 requests?*

 Despite the perception that one of RCom’s duties would be to provide
 formal approval for research projects, it was never designed to do so and
 it never had the power to enforce formal review decisions. Instead, it was
 offered as a volunteer support service in an effort to help minimize
 disruption, improve the relevance of research involving Wikimedia
 contributors, sanity check the credentials of the researchers, create
 collaborations between researchers working on the same topic. The lack of
 community or WMF policies to back subject recruitment caused in the past
 few years quite some headaches, particularly in those cases in which
 recruitment attempts were blocked and referred to the RCom in order to
 “obtain formal approval”. The review process itself was meant to be as
 inclusive as possible and not restricted to RCom participants and
 researchers having their proposal reviewed were explicitly invited to
 address any questions or concerns raised by community members on the talk
 page. I totally agree that the way in which the project templates and forms
 were designed needs some serious overhaul to remove any indication of a
 binding review process or a commitment for reviews to be delivered within a
 fixed time frame. I cannot think of any example in which the review process
 discriminated some type of projects (say qualitative research) in favor of
 other types of research, but I am sure different research proposals
 attracted different levels of participation and interest in the review
 process. My recommendation to anyone interested in designing future subject
 recruitment processes is to focus on a lightweight review process open to
 the largest possible number of community members but backed by transparent
 and *enforceable* policies. It’s a really hard problem and there is
 simply no obvious silver bullet solution that can be found without some
 experimentation and fault tolerance.

 *What about requests for **private data**?*

 Private data and technical support requests from WMF are a different
 story: they were folded into the list of frequently asked questions hosted
 on the RCom section of Meta, but by definition they require a direct and
 substantial involvement from the Foundation: (1) they involve WMF as the
 

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Pine W
The good and bad news is that the status quo with RCOM is likely to remain
unless someone in WMF, the Board, or the community is interested enough in
addressing the situation to put in some effort to make RCOM a functioning
organization.

At the moment I have the impression that WMF researchers are absorbing most
of the work that RCOM and some dedicated RCOM admin support could do, like
help with lit review and prevent outside researchers from using WMF
databases in ways that compromise user privacy. My perception is that the
current situation is inefficient for WMF and for outside researchers who
want to do good work with WMF  or community resources, and also that RCOM
lacks the resources to respond in timely ways to requests for help with
outside research that could benefit Wikimedia. So, I there are reasons to
changs the status quo, and I hope WMF or the Board would be interested in
something like the proposal I made previously.

Phoebe, what do you think?

Pine
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Heather Ford
+1 on Piotr's comments.

And very, very happy to hear about
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia --
I think this is definitely the way to go: developing guidelines that we
*regularly point people to* when they have questions etc. And maybe
something that we as a group can work on in the coming months.

I'll reiterate my suggestions for goals here and add some of Piotr's and
others' comments:

1. developing ethical research guidelines for Wikipedia research
- by building on the WP:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia page and regularly
pointing people to it

2. finding ways of making responsible requests to the WMF for data that
they hold that might benefit research outside the WMF
- through an official process with guidelines from the WMF on response
times/ viable requests etc.

3. developing opportunities for researchers to collaborate and share what
they're doing with the wider research community
- reorganising the research hub and pointing to best case practices etc
(similar to the WP Global Education program, as Piotr suggests)
- actively recruiting WP researchers to join this list and visit the
research hub
- some other regular way of involving researchers such as inviting them to
showcase their work and have it recognised on the list, on the hub etc
- recognising outstanding research (through a prize perhaps as Aaron
suggested)

Looking forward to hearing Phoebe's suggestions!

Best,
Heather.


Heather Ford
Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral Programme
EthnographyMatters http://ethnographymatters.net | Oxford Digital
Ethnography Group http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115
http://hblog.org | @hfordsa http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa




On 29 July 2014 09:04, Pine W wiki.p...@gmail.com wrote:

 The good and bad news is that the status quo with RCOM is likely to remain
 unless someone in WMF, the Board, or the community is interested enough in
 addressing the situation to put in some effort to make RCOM a functioning
 organization.

 At the moment I have the impression that WMF researchers are absorbing
 most of the work that RCOM and some dedicated RCOM admin support could do,
 like help with lit review and prevent outside researchers from using WMF
 databases in ways that compromise user privacy. My perception is that the
 current situation is inefficient for WMF and for outside researchers who
 want to do good work with WMF  or community resources, and also that RCOM
 lacks the resources to respond in timely ways to requests for help with
 outside research that could benefit Wikimedia. So, I there are reasons to
 changs the status quo, and I hope WMF or the Board would be interested in
 something like the proposal I made previously.

 Phoebe, what do you think?

 Pine

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Nathan
Hi Aaron, what's the source of authority for RCOM (or its members acting
independently) to perform a review procedure and claim it is required?


On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Re. RCOM and review processes, these are two different things.   RCOM is
 an old, defunct WMF sanctioned working group of staff, researchers and
 Wikipedians.  If we want to revive RCOM, it seems like this should be
 discussed in another thread.



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Aaron Halfaker
I don't believe there is any claim of authority for RCOM.  At least I was
not involved in making claims that it is required and I do not see it as
such.  In fact, I have argued in the past that studies run by Wikipedians
won't gain much from the process[1]. However, I do recommend that academics
-- especially those who do not otherwise engage with Wikipedians -- to work
with an RCOM member to coordinate a review in order to ensure that you
won't see massive push-back when you start recruiting on Wikipedia -- as
studies tended to see when they were run before the process.

1.
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:IEG/Reimagining_Wikipedia_Mentorship#English_Wikipedia_AGAIN


On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Aaron, what's the source of authority for RCOM (or its members acting
 independently) to perform a review procedure and claim it is required?



 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Re. RCOM and review processes, these are two different things.   RCOM is
 an old, defunct WMF sanctioned working group of staff, researchers and
 Wikipedians.  If we want to revive RCOM, it seems like this should be
 discussed in another thread.



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 Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l


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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Nathan
Thanks. Can you explain why you continue to solicit submissions for your
review, and promise a 1-2 week turn around time, when it appears that the
review process rarely occurs and many (if not most) submissions are not
reviewed?


On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:42 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
wrote:

 I don't believe there is any claim of authority for RCOM.  At least I was
 not involved in making claims that it is required and I do not see it as
 such.  In fact, I have argued in the past that studies run by Wikipedians
 won't gain much from the process[1]. However, I do recommend that academics
 -- especially those who do not otherwise engage with Wikipedians -- to work
 with an RCOM member to coordinate a review in order to ensure that you
 won't see massive push-back when you start recruiting on Wikipedia -- as
 studies tended to see when they were run before the process.

 1.
 https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:IEG/Reimagining_Wikipedia_Mentorship#English_Wikipedia_AGAIN


 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Aaron, what's the source of authority for RCOM (or its members acting
 independently) to perform a review procedure and claim it is required?



 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 Re. RCOM and review processes, these are two different things.   RCOM is
 an old, defunct WMF sanctioned working group of staff, researchers and
 Wikipedians.  If we want to revive RCOM, it seems like this should be
 discussed in another thread.



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 https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Aaron Halfaker
The review process occurs in all instances where review coordination is
requested (by emailing me or DarTar).  There's only been one case where a
review took more than 2 weeks and that was because the researcher didn't
respond to requests for more information quickly.

Nathan, I think you are mistakenly thinking that all research needs to be
reviewed.  Only research that involves the recruitment of Wikipedians as
subjects is intended to be reviewed via RCOM's process.  Only those studies
that request it will be reviewed.

-Aaron



On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 8:59 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thanks. Can you explain why you continue to solicit submissions for your
 review, and promise a 1-2 week turn around time, when it appears that the
 review process rarely occurs and many (if not most) submissions are not
 reviewed?


 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:42 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 I don't believe there is any claim of authority for RCOM.  At least I was
 not involved in making claims that it is required and I do not see it as
 such.  In fact, I have argued in the past that studies run by Wikipedians
 won't gain much from the process[1]. However, I do recommend that academics
 -- especially those who do not otherwise engage with Wikipedians -- to work
 with an RCOM member to coordinate a review in order to ensure that you
 won't see massive push-back when you start recruiting on Wikipedia -- as
 studies tended to see when they were run before the process.

 1.
 https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:IEG/Reimagining_Wikipedia_Mentorship#English_Wikipedia_AGAIN


 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Aaron, what's the source of authority for RCOM (or its members acting
 independently) to perform a review procedure and claim it is required?



 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Aaron Halfaker 
 aaron.halfa...@gmail.com wrote:

 Re. RCOM and review processes, these are two different things.   RCOM
 is an old, defunct WMF sanctioned working group of staff, researchers and
 Wikipedians.  If we want to revive RCOM, it seems like this should be
 discussed in another thread.



 ___
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 Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Nathan
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:11 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
wrote:

 The review process occurs in all instances where review coordination is
 requested (by emailing me or DarTar).  There's only been one case where a
 review took more than 2 weeks and that was because the researcher didn't
 respond to requests for more information quickly.

 Nathan, I think you are mistakenly thinking that all research needs to be
 reviewed.  Only research that involves the recruitment of Wikipedians as
 subjects is intended to be reviewed via RCOM's process.  Only those studies
 that request it will be reviewed.

 -Aaron




Thanks, perhaps the confusion exists because there is so much apparent
infrastructure around the review process (including a big button that
creates a research project page, ostensibly to facilitate a review). It
might also be that communication from the former RCOM's members is
misleading; in one e-mail in this thread you say RCOM is defunct, and in
another you suggest that research recruiting Wikipedians needs RCOM's
review.

Either there is an RCOM and it functions effectively, or nothing should or
must rely on a defunct committee to complete a defunct process. If the
committee is indeed defunct, then messaging around the review process
should be adjusted to make it clear that it is voluntary, and there are
only two reviewers acting on their own initiative. Your insistence on
having it both ways is leading to confusion, not just from me but on the
part of people proposing research projects and expecting comment from
RCOM.
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Aaron Halfaker
RCOM is not functioning as a complete group anymore.  However, we split
into sub-committees while we were still a functioning group.  The subject
recruitment sub-committee and newsletter sub-committees are performing
vital functions still.

I never stated that research recruiting needs RCOM approval.  I definitely
said that it ought to have RCOM approval.  There are also more than two
review coordinators (not not reviewers) -- it's just that DarTar and I
have accepted the burden of distributing work.  When people are busy, we
often coordinate the reviews ourselves.

I welcome your edits to make it clear that review is optional.  As you
might imagine, I have plenty of work to do and I appreciate your good-faith
collaboration on improving our research documentation.

-Aaron


On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:21 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:




 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:11 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 The review process occurs in all instances where review coordination is
 requested (by emailing me or DarTar).  There's only been one case where a
 review took more than 2 weeks and that was because the researcher didn't
 respond to requests for more information quickly.

 Nathan, I think you are mistakenly thinking that all research needs to be
 reviewed.  Only research that involves the recruitment of Wikipedians as
 subjects is intended to be reviewed via RCOM's process.  Only those studies
 that request it will be reviewed.

 -Aaron




 Thanks, perhaps the confusion exists because there is so much apparent
 infrastructure around the review process (including a big button that
 creates a research project page, ostensibly to facilitate a review). It
 might also be that communication from the former RCOM's members is
 misleading; in one e-mail in this thread you say RCOM is defunct, and in
 another you suggest that research recruiting Wikipedians needs RCOM's
 review.

 Either there is an RCOM and it functions effectively, or nothing should or
 must rely on a defunct committee to complete a defunct process. If the
 committee is indeed defunct, then messaging around the review process
 should be adjusted to make it clear that it is voluntary, and there are
 only two reviewers acting on their own initiative. Your insistence on
 having it both ways is leading to confusion, not just from me but on the
 part of people proposing research projects and expecting comment from
 RCOM.


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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Heather Ford

 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:25 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 RCOM is not functioning as a complete group anymore.


I'm a little confused why this wasn't made clear right at the beginning of
this thread e.g. when others suggested this might be the case and you
refuted them? Also, I'm not sure what 'functioning as a complete group'
actually means. Either its functioning or its not, surely?


 However, we split into sub-committees while we were still a functioning
 group.  The subject recruitment sub-committee and newsletter sub-committees
 are performing vital functions still.

 I never stated that research recruiting needs RCOM approval. I definitely
 said that it ought to have RCOM approval.


So, does that mean that is what the policy *ought to* be now? And do you
believe that this should this be the way that the policy gets decided?
Because it isn't right now as far as I can see. As Kerry noted earlier on,
the policy as it stands [1] says that researchers must obtain approval
through the process described. If the wording now needs to be changed to
ought to then surely this requires more consensus than your single
message here?

re. the comment that I (and the other researchers?) on this list shouldn't
be the ones to decide what the regulation should be, I disagree on two
counts. a) It seems on the one hand that you want this to be
self-regulation i.e. you invited researchers on this list to join R-COM
at the beginning of this thread, but that you don't think that the
researchers here should be able to determine what to regulate. I know that
you're looking for an inclusive process but you can't have it both ways: if
we are going to help regulate, then we need to at least help decide how to
regulate. b) Pine suggested a board decision on this earlier one to obtain
clarity and I supported this but it was met with silence, which is why I
followed up.


 There are also more than two review coordinators (not not reviewers)
 -- it's just that DarTar and I have accepted the burden of distributing
 work.  When people are busy, we often coordinate the reviews ourselves.


I can understand your frustration; I really can! I know that you've done a
lot of really great, prior work on this and I don't think any of us are
saying that we need to throw the baby out with the bathwater. But what is
clear is that clarification is required - especially on the distribution of
tasks between Foundation employees, the research community and Wikimedia
editors. And this is *especially* true for people outside this list.


 I welcome your edits to make it clear that review is optional.  As you
 might imagine, I have plenty of work to do and I appreciate your good-faith
 collaboration on improving our research documentation.


I'm frustrated by this response. If the policy is incorrectly described on
the policy pages, then someone from RCom (or whatever it is now called)
should be the one to change this - preferably with some discussion. I find
it frustrating that WMF employees are often the ones who make the final
policy pronouncements but then tell others to implement it. And if we don't
do the work, then we're apparently not assuming good faith.

This is a great opportunity to rejuvenate the process; hopefully it will
eventually be seen that way :)

Best,
Heather.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Research_recruitment

-Aaron

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Aaron Halfaker

 Either [RCOM is] functioning or its not, surely?


Well, I explained that there are functioning sub-committees still.  In
other words, there are initiatives that RCOM started that are alive and
successful, but we no longer coordinate as a larger group.  I don't know
how else to explain it.  I guess you could say that RCOM is still
functioning and that we no longer require/engage in group meetings.

As Kerry noted earlier on, the policy as it stands [1] says that
 researchers must obtain approval through the process described. If the
 wording now needs to be changed to ought to then surely this requires
 more consensus than your single message here?


That's a proposed policy.  Until it is passed by consensus, the must is a
proposed term.  I think that it should be must, but until that consensus
is reached, I'll continue to say that it ought to.

Regarding researchers stating what should be regulated, I think there is a
big difference between *deciding what should be regulated* and *being
involved in the discussion of *how* it should be regulated*.  Hence why I
welcome participation.  What I'm saying is that you have a vested interest
in not being regulated, but I'd still like to discuss how your activities
can be regulated effectively  efficiently.  Does that make sense?

 b) Pine suggested a board decision on this earlier one to obtain clarity
 and I supported this but it was met with silence, which is why I followed
 up.


I welcome you to raise it to them.  I don't think it is worth their time,
but they might disagree.

But what is clear is that clarification is required - especially on the
 distribution of tasks between Foundation employees, the research community
 and Wikimedia editors. And this is *especially* true for people outside
 this list.


I think that the proposed policy on English Wikipedia does that quite well.
 That's why I directed people there.  Also, again, I am not working on RCOM
or subject recruitment as a WMF employee.  I do this in my volunteer time.
 This is true of all of RCOM who happen to also be staff.

if you want process to be more clearly documented, you also have to address
people like Poitr who would rather not have processes described in detail.
 When you guys work out how clearly you want a process to be described,
please let me know.  I'm tired of re-spec'ing processes.  This is the third
iteration.

If the policy is incorrectly described on the policy pages, then someone
 from RCom (or whatever it is now called) should be the one to change this -
 preferably with some discussion.


Heather, that is a *proposed *policy page on English Wikipedia.  It is not
part of RCOM.  It would render RCOM irrelevant for subject recruitment
concerns.  That's why I started it.  I don't think that
RCOM/WMF/researchers should own subject recruitment review.  I think the
community being studied should own it and that RCOM/WMF/researchers should
participate.

Also, I am not your employee.  This is my volunteer time.  I don't have
much of it, so I focus on keeping the system running -- and it is -- and
improving the system -- which is the proposal I linked to.  If you want
something done and other volunteers don't have time to do it.  Do it
yourself. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:SOFIXIT

-Aaron




On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:23 AM, Heather Ford hfor...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 10:25 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfa...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 RCOM is not functioning as a complete group anymore.


 I'm a little confused why this wasn't made clear right at the beginning of
 this thread e.g. when others suggested this might be the case and you
 refuted them? Also, I'm not sure what 'functioning as a complete group'
 actually means. Either its functioning or its not, surely?


 However, we split into sub-committees while we were still a functioning
 group.  The subject recruitment sub-committee and newsletter sub-committees
 are performing vital functions still.

 I never stated that research recruiting needs RCOM approval. I
 definitely said that it ought to have RCOM approval.


  So, does that mean that is what the policy *ought to* be now? And do you
 believe that this should this be the way that the policy gets decided?
 Because it isn't right now as far as I can see. As Kerry noted earlier on,
 the policy as it stands [1] says that researchers must obtain approval
 through the process described. If the wording now needs to be changed to
 ought to then surely this requires more consensus than your single
 message here?

 re. the comment that I (and the other researchers?) on this list shouldn't
 be the ones to decide what the regulation should be, I disagree on two
 counts. a) It seems on the one hand that you want this to be
 self-regulation i.e. you invited researchers on this list to join R-COM
 at the beginning of this thread, but that you don't think that the
 researchers here should be able to determine what to regulate. I know that
 you're looking for an 

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Lane Rasberry
Hey guys,

I posted some thoughts to my own blog and am linking to those posts below.
Everything I say on my blog is captured in the summary below, so feel free
to not click through.


My biggest worry is that researchers who recruit human subjects assume that
there are huge numbers of Wikipedians for them to survey, and consequently,
they do not need to do a lot of advance survey preparation because there is
no harm from distracting Wikipedians from their usual volunteer work. This
assumption is wrong because actually almost every researcher recruiting
human subjects wants Wikipedians who are in very short supply.
Consequently, researchers do cause harm to the community by soliciting for
volunteer time, and Wikipedia community benefit is dubious when researchers
do not do sufficient preparation for their work. This is not quite
accurate, but if there were one message I could convey to researchers, it
would be Your research participant pool only consists of about 30 super
busy people and many other volunteers greatly depend on getting their time.
When you take time from a Wikipedian, you are taking that time away from
other volunteers who really need it, so be respectful of your intervention
in our communities.


I do not want a lot of gatekeeping between researchers and the Wikipedia
community, but at the same time, researchers should take professional pride
in their work and take care not to disrupt Wikimedia community activities.


http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/request-for-researchers-when-doing-research-on-the-wikimedia-community/

http://bluerasberry.com/2014/07/problems-with-research-on-wikipedia/

I am still thinking about what should be done with research.

yours,



On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Dario Taraborelli 
dtarabore...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 Hi all,

 I am a bit late in the game, but since so many questions were raised about
 RCom, its scope, its goals, the source of its authority etc. and I helped
 coordinate it in the early days I thought I’d chime in to clear some
 confusion.

 *Is RCom an official WMF body or a group of volunteers?*

 RCom was created as a volunteer body to help design policies and best
 practices around research on Wikimedia projects. People who joined the
 committee did so on a volunteer basis and with a variety of interests by
 responding to a call for participation issued by WMF. Despite the fact that
 the original initiative came from WMF, its membership almost entirely
 consisted of non-WMF researchers and community members (those of us who are
 now with Wikimedia had no affiliation with the Foundation when RCom was
 launched [1]). RCom work was and remains 100% volunteer-driven, even for
 those of us who are full-time employees of the Foundation.

 *Is RCom a body regulating subject recruitment?*

 No, subject recruitment was only one among many areas of interest
 identified by its participants [2]

 *Is RCom still alive?*

 RCom stopped working a while ago* as a* *group meeting on a regular basis
 to discuss joint initiatives*. However, it spawned a large number of
 initiatives and workgroups that are still alive and kicking, some of which
 have evolved into other projects that are now only loosely associated with
 RCom. These include reviewing subject recruitment requests, but also the
 Research Newsletter, which has been published monthly for the last 3 years;
 countless initiatives in the area of open access; initiatives to facilitate
 Wikimedia data documentation and data discoverability; hackathons and
 outreach events aimed at bringing together researchers and Wikimedia
 contributors. Subject recruitment reviews and discussions are still
 happening, and I believe they provide a valuable service when you consider
 that they are entirely run by a microscopic number of volunteers. I don’t
 think that the alternative between “either RCom exists and it functions
 effectively or reviews should immediately stop” is well framed or even
 desirable, for the reasons that I explain below.

 *What’s the source of RCom’s authority in reviewing subject recruitment
 requests?*

 Despite the perception that one of RCom’s duties would be to provide
 formal approval for research projects, it was never designed to do so and
 it never had the power to enforce formal review decisions. Instead, it was
 offered as a volunteer support service in an effort to help minimize
 disruption, improve the relevance of research involving Wikimedia
 contributors, sanity check the credentials of the researchers, create
 collaborations between researchers working on the same topic. The lack of
 community or WMF policies to back subject recruitment caused in the past
 few years quite some headaches, particularly in those cases in which
 recruitment attempts were blocked and referred to the RCom in order to
 “obtain formal approval”. The review process itself was meant to be as
 inclusive as possible and not restricted to RCom participants and
 researchers having their proposal 

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Piotr Konieczny

This time I'll respond below.

On 7/29/2014 17:50, Heather Ford wrote:

+1 on Piotr's comments.

And very, very happy to hear about 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia -- 
I think this is definitely the way to go: developing guidelines that 
we *regularly point people to* when they have questions etc. And maybe 
something that we as a group can work on in the coming months.


I'll reiterate my suggestions for goals here and add some of Piotr's 
and others' comments:


1. developing ethical research guidelines for Wikipedia research
- by building on the WP:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia page and 
regularly pointing people to it


Two ideas:
* there's a drive to print out leaflets for Wikimania, this page could 
be advertised there

* even better, we should try to advertise it in a leaflet form at Wikisym
* WMF could try to create a short handout booklet based on it



2. finding ways of making responsible requests to the WMF for data 
that they hold that might benefit research outside the WMF
- through an official process with guidelines from the WMF on response 
times/ viable requests etc.




It is a good example of an idea that helps rather than hinders 
researchers, and an area where RCOM-like body assistance would be useful.


3. developing opportunities for researchers to collaborate and share 
what they're doing with the wider research community
- reorganising the research hub and pointing to best case practices 
etc (similar to the WP Global Education program, as Piotr suggests)
- actively recruiting WP researchers to join this list and visit the 
research hub
- some other regular way of involving researchers such as inviting 
them to showcase their work and have it recognised on the list, on the 
hub etc
- recognising outstanding research (through a prize perhaps as Aaron 
suggested)




All +1

--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus


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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Piotr Konieczny
I have replied at 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Research_recruitment#Strong_objection


While this group is transparent, Wikipedia discussion is even more so, 
and I prefer to held discussion in a more transparent venue where possible.


For those that don't want to read another site's discussion, a short 
summary of my points:
* I agree that it's good to VOLUNTARILY recommend best practices as 
Aaron lists in his 1-3 points
* I don't recognize RCOM's or Aaron's authority to say things like 
maybe you shouldn't be allowed to contact Wikipedians. If a 
researchers violates Wikipedia rules, our regular policies enforced by 
regular admin corp, plus in extreme cases potential shaming of unethical 
research through publicity/contacting unethical researcher departments 
should be enough.


--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/29/2014 22:26, Aaron Halfaker wrote:
I don't think that it is appropriate that those who benefit from 
deregulation (e.g.  No oversight for running surveys.  No formalized 
community review process.) make the decisions about what is worth 
regulating.  You'll notice that the proposed policy that Poitr calls 
instruction creep basically states that you do three things:


1. Document your research.  Specifically, your methods of recruitment, 
consent process, data storage and publication strategy.
2. Discuss your research -- with Wikipedians to make sure that you 
won't cause a disruption

3. Proceed as consensus emerges.

We all seem to agree that this is good practice.  Where is the rest of 
the instruction creep?  Where is the anti-researcher bend?


Poitr, you speculate about potential problems like people just coming 
to say IDONTLIKEIT, but I have yet to see that happen in RCOM's 
process despite the fact that we invite editors from the population 
being sampled to the conversation.  Even if it was true, I think that 
if some of your potential participants don't like what you are doing, 
you ought to address their concerns.


I'm all for developing guidelines (note that Ethically researching 
Wikipedia IS NOT a guideline).  I've wrote my fair share of essays to 
help researchers  Wikipedians find their way around research projects 
in Wikipedia.  E.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Research 
and and 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:EpochFail/Don%27t_bite_the_researchers. 
 However, I've watched good research projects fail because researchers 
didn't have the wikipedian backgrounds that you guys do (Heather and 
Poitr).  See some examples of (IRB approved) studies running into 
project-halting difficulties: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Research#Examples_of_unmediated_interactions 
 These examples are what got me to start working on developing a 
process in the first place.


If you really think that documenting your research and having a 
discussion about it is too much instruction, then maybe you shouldn't 
be allowed to contact Wikipedians.  If you do think that every 
research project that does recruitment should be documented and 
discussed, why not just say so?


-Aaron


On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 3:50 AM, Heather Ford hfor...@gmail.com 
mailto:hfor...@gmail.com wrote:


+1 on Piotr's comments.

And very, very happy to hear about
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia
-- I think this is definitely the way to go: developing guidelines
that we *regularly point people to* when they have questions etc.
And maybe something that we as a group can work on in the coming
months.

I'll reiterate my suggestions for goals here and add some of
Piotr's and others' comments:

1. developing ethical research guidelines for Wikipedia research
- by building on the WP:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia page and
regularly pointing people to it

2. finding ways of making responsible requests to the WMF for data
that they hold that might benefit research outside the WMF
- through an official process with guidelines from the WMF on
response times/ viable requests etc.

3. developing opportunities for researchers to collaborate and
share what they're doing with the wider research community
- reorganising the research hub and pointing to best case
practices etc (similar to the WP Global Education program, as
Piotr suggests)
- actively recruiting WP researchers to join this list and visit
the research hub
- some other regular way of involving researchers such as inviting
them to showcase their work and have it recognised on the list, on
the hub etc
- recognising outstanding research (through a prize perhaps as
Aaron suggested)

Looking forward to hearing Phoebe's suggestions!

Best,
Heather.


Heather Ford
Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral
 

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Piotr Konieczny
This an interesting clarification. I support framing RCOM's mission as 
educational (teaching researchers about best practices), and even more 
so clearly stating that its procedures are voluntary. In other words, 
such a body should have an uncontroversial consultative/advisory role, 
rather then be a gatekeeper of sorts. That said, I don't know if we need 
a body at all. Why couldn't all of this be done under existing 
community auspices such as WikiProject Research?


I still think our priority should be to redesign our research pages, 
create a proper research portal with best practices (and hopefully some 
carrot-like tools that help researchers, from certificates to how-tos 
for grants/data to research tools) that we could then advertise among 
most Wikipedia researchers.


IMHO one of RCOM's biggest fallacies was (is...) trying to frame itself 
as a gatekeeper then a facilitator.


--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/29/2014 22:42, Aaron Halfaker wrote:
I don't believe there is any claim of authority for RCOM.  At least I 
was not involved in making claims that it is required and I do not see 
it as such.  In fact, I have argued in the past that studies run by 
Wikipedians won't gain much from the process[1]. However, I do 
recommend that academics -- especially those who do not otherwise 
engage with Wikipedians -- to work with an RCOM member to coordinate a 
review in order to ensure that you won't see massive push-back when 
you start recruiting on Wikipedia -- as studies tended to see when 
they were run before the process.


1. 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants_talk:IEG/Reimagining_Wikipedia_Mentorship#English_Wikipedia_AGAIN



On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com 
mailto:nawr...@gmail.com wrote:


Hi Aaron, what's the source of authority for RCOM (or its members
acting independently) to perform a review procedure and claim it
is required?



On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Aaron Halfaker
aaron.halfa...@gmail.com mailto:aaron.halfa...@gmail.com wrote:

Re. RCOM and review processes, these are two different things.
  RCOM is an old, defunct WMF sanctioned working group of
staff, researchers and Wikipedians.  If we want to revive
RCOM, it seems like this should be discussed in another thread.



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-29 Thread Piotr Konieczny
That's extremely helpful, and I suggest copying it to the 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Committee page


(that page needs many updates)
--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/30/2014 07:00, Dario Taraborelli wrote:

Hi all,

I am a bit late in the game, but since so many questions were raised 
about RCom, its scope, its goals, the source of its authority etc. and 
I helped coordinate it in the early days I thought I’d chime in to 
clear some confusion.


*Is RCom an official WMF body or a group of volunteers?*

RCom was created as a volunteer body to help design policies and best 
practices around research on Wikimedia projects. People who joined the 
committee did so on a volunteer basis and with a variety of interests 
by responding to a call for participation issued by WMF. Despite the 
fact that the original initiative came from WMF, its membership almost 
entirely consisted of non-WMF researchers and community members (those 
of us who are now with Wikimedia had no affiliation with the 
Foundation when RCom was launched [1]). RCom work was and remains 100% 
volunteer-driven, even for those of us who are full-time employees of 
the Foundation.


*Is RCom a body regulating subject recruitment?*

No, subject recruitment was only one among many areas of interest 
identified by its participants [2]


*Is RCom still alive?*

RCom stopped working a while ago/as a/ /group meeting on a regular 
basis to discuss joint initiatives/. However, it spawned a large 
number of initiatives and workgroups that are still alive and kicking, 
some of which have evolved into other projects that are now only 
loosely associated with RCom. These include reviewing subject 
recruitment requests, but also the Research Newsletter, which has been 
published monthly for the last 3 years; countless initiatives in the 
area of open access; initiatives to facilitate Wikimedia data 
documentation and data discoverability; hackathons and outreach events 
aimed at bringing together researchers and Wikimedia contributors. 
Subject recruitment reviews and discussions are still happening, and I 
believe they provide a valuable service when you consider that they 
are entirely run by a microscopic number of volunteers. I don’t think 
that the alternative between “either RCom exists and it functions 
effectively or reviews should immediately stop” is well framed or even 
desirable, for the reasons that I explain below.


*What’s the source of RCom’s authority in reviewing subject 
recruitment requests?*


Despite the perception that one of RCom’s duties would be to provide 
formal approval for research projects, it was never designed to do so 
and it never had the power to enforce formal review decisions. 
Instead, it was offered as a volunteer support service in an effort to 
help minimize disruption, improve the relevance of research involving 
Wikimedia contributors, sanity check the credentials of the 
researchers, create collaborations between researchers working on the 
same topic. The lack of community or WMF policies to back subject 
recruitment caused in the past few years quite some headaches, 
particularly in those cases in which recruitment attempts were blocked 
and referred to the RCom in order to “obtain formal approval”. The 
review process itself was meant to be as inclusive as possible and not 
restricted to RCom participants and researchers having their proposal 
reviewed were explicitly invited to address any questions or concerns 
raised by community members on the talk page. I totally agree that the 
way in which the project templates and forms were designed needs some 
serious overhaul to remove any indication of a binding review process 
or a commitment for reviews to be delivered within a fixed time frame. 
I cannot think of any example in which the review process 
discriminated some type of projects (say qualitative research) in 
favor of other types of research, but I am sure different research 
proposals attracted different levels of participation and interest in 
the review process. My recommendation to anyone interested in 
designing future subject recruitment processes is to focus on a 
lightweight review process open to the largest possible number of 
community members but backed by transparent and /enforceable/ 
policies. It’s a really hard problem and there is simply no obvious 
silver bullet solution that can be found without some experimentation 
and fault tolerance.


*What about requests for **private data**?*

Private data and technical support requests from WMF are a different 
story: they were folded into the list of frequently asked questions 
hosted on the RCom section of Meta, but by definition they require a 
direct and substantial involvement from the Foundation: (1) they 
involve WMF as the legal entity that would be held liable for 
disclosing data in 

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-28 Thread Piotr Konieczny

[rant - tl;dr]

Ugh, another new instruction creep with an anti-research bent to boot. 
Thanks, Aaron, for linking it here, as this is the first time I've heard 
of this - now I actually get to oppose this on record before this is 
archived :


That was first third of the problem with RCOM in the first place: next 
to nobody knew (or knows) about it. When we still get many studies about 
Wikipedia who clearly display the fact that the researchers fail at 
basic lit review not citing any prior studies, to expect that most would 
try to (and be able to) find such pages is nothing but an exercise in 
bureaucratizing the project. The second third of the problem is that all 
such policies, if implemented, would make research much more difficult; 
anytime you add some reviewers to the mix, you add the risk of having 
good project rejected because of reviewers IDONTLIKEIT, and with the new 
proposal idea of letting complete amateurs be the reviewers... 
Fortunately, this doesn't fix the third compound problem of RCOM, which 
is that a) it had no real power to enforce anything it required and b) 
next to nobody wanted to invest time into doing the work, because it's a 
waste of time: non-productive work (not contributing to building an 
encyclopedia) that very, very few people in our community care about., 
and that adds an unimportant line to one's professional CV. RCOM is 
dying of inactivity and of being not needed, we should officially retire 
it instead of trying to clone it on Wikipedia.


[/rant]

Don't get me wrong, at first RCOM was a nice and noble idea. A guideline 
page for researchers is helpful, I do like the idea of trying to list 
and categorize ongoing research 
(https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Projects), it provides some 
useful links to data, FAQ and such. However, as in many other places on 
Wikipedia, this turned into an unnecessary instruction creep, which I 
very strongly oppose .


A while ago I've contributed to 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia
It's a simple page, the gist of which is that any professional scholar 
who is researching Wikipedia should already be familiar with their 
professional codes of ethics, which in turn are perfectly sufficient to 
protect Wikipedia and its volunteers and users from any abuses. It also 
doesn't require any policing from the community outside normal scope. 
Any (extremely rare - can anyone even cite one?) disruptive experiments 
which breach the professional codes of ethics in the first place should 
result in bans and WMF official complains. Outside that, Wikipedians can 
deal with survey/interview requests like everyone else - ignore them if 
they don't like them. No special body to police researchers is needed. 
No approval body is needed for anything outside WMF grants, which WMF 
and/or the existing grant structure can handle.


What we need is for someone to review all research-related pages on 
Wikipedia and meta, merge any similar ones, and that's it. In other 
words, we need to condolence and organize the sprawl mess that research 
pages have become, not to add to them.


--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/17/2014 05:58, Aaron Halfaker wrote:
RCOM review is still alive and looking for new reviewers (really, 
coordinators).  Researchers can be directed to me or Dario 
(dtarabore...@wikimedia.org mailto:dtarabore...@wikimedia.org) to be 
assigned a reviewer.  There is also a proposed policy on enwiki that 
could use some eyeballs: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Research_recruitment



On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 11:16 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) 
nemow...@gmail.com mailto:nemow...@gmail.com wrote:


phoebe ayers, 16/07/2014 19:21:
 (Personally, I think the answer should be to resuscitate RCOM, but
 that's easy to say and harder to do!)

IMHO in the meanwhile the most useful thing folks can do is
subscribing
to the feed of new research pages:

https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:NewPagesfeed=atomhidebots=1hideredirs=1limit=500offset=namespace=202
It's easier to build a functioning RCOM out of an active community of
reviewers, than the other way round.

Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-28 Thread Piotr Konieczny
*To:* kerry.raym...@gmail.com mailto:kerry.raym...@gmail.com;
Research into Wikimedia content and communities


*Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can
and cannot recruit me for whatever purposes.

I don't think that it really should be about WMF. The WMF
shouldn't enforce anything. The community can formulate good
practices for researchers and _advise_ community members not to
cooperate with researchers who don't follow these practices. Not
much more is needed.



--
Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
http://aharoni.wordpress.com
‪“We're living in pieces,
I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore

2014-07-17 8:24 GMT+03:00 Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com
mailto:kerry.raym...@gmail.com:

Just saying here what I already put on the Talk page:

I am a little bothered by the opening sentence This page
documents the process that researchers must follow before
asking Wikipedia contributors to participate in research
studies such as surveys, interviews and experiments.

WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who
can and cannot recruit me for whatever purposes. What WMF does
own is its communication channels to me as a contributor and
WMF has a right to control what occurs on those channels. Also
I think WMF probably should be concerned about both its
readers and its contributors being recruited through its
channels (as either might be being recruited). I think this
distinction should be made, e.g.

This page documents the process that researchers must follow
if they wish to use Wikipedia's (WMF's?) communication
channels to recruit people to participate in research studies
such as surveys, interviews and experiments. Communication
channels include its mailing lists, its Project pages, Talk
pages, and User Talk pages [and whatever else I've forgotten].

If researchers want to recruit WPians via non-WMF means, I
don’t think it’s any business of WMF’s. An example might be a
researcher who wanted to contact WPians via chapters or
thorgs; I would leave it for the chapter/thorg to decide if
they wanted to assist the researcher via their communication
channels.

Of course, the practical reality of it is that some
researchers (oblivious of WMF’s concerns in relation to
recruitment of WPians to research projects) will simply use
WMF’s channels without asking nicely first. Obviously we can
remove such requests on-wiki and follow up any email requests
with the commentary that this was not an approved request. In
my category of [whatever else I’ve forgotten], I guess there
are things like Facebook groups and any other social media
presence.

Also to be practical, if WMF is to have a process to vet
research surveys, I think it has to be sufficiently fast and
not be overly demanding to avoid the possibility of the
researcher giving up (“too hard to deal with these people”)
and simply spamming email, project pages, social media in the
hope of recruiting some participants regardless. That is, if
we make it too slow/hard to do the right thing, we effectively
encourage doing the wrong thing. Also, what value-add can we
give them to reward those who do the right thing? It’s nice to
have a carrot as well as a stick when it comes to onerous
processes J

Because of the criticism of “not giving back”, could we
perhaps do things to try to make the researcher feel part of
the community to make “giving back” more likely? For example,
could we give them a slot every now and again to talk about
their project in the RD Showcase? Encourage them to be on
this mailing list. Are we at a point where it might make sense
to organise a Wikipedia research conference to help build a
research community? Just thinking aloud here …

Kerry



*From:*wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] *On
Behalf Of *Aaron Halfaker
*Sent:* Thursday, 17 July 2014 6:59 AM
*To:* Research into Wikimedia content and communities
*Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia
surveys

RCOM review is still alive and looking for new reviewers
(really, coordinators).  Researchers can be directed to me or
Dario (dtarabore

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-28 Thread Piotr Konieczny

it was difficult for contributors to tell if a survey was ethical, vetted

Now, that's a problem of bad research design. Survey design 101 requires 
that an invitation to the survey briefly discusses those issues. It all 
boils down to the fact that many lazy or inadequately trained 
researchers don't bother to do what is described at 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ethically_researching_Wikipedia#Surveys_and_interviews


It is, unfortunately, not in our power to educate those researchers. 
RCOM cannot do it, because most researchers will never find out it 
exists, and will send invitations to their surveys or such ignoring any 
required (or recommended) processes.


There's only one way that a body like RCOM could try to have some real 
influence among serious Wikipedia researchers who at least have a decent 
chance to finding out that it exists and what it does (like those of us 
here). That is, if it had a carrot to go with the stick of (what, 
exactly, I am still not sure - ban researchers accounts if they don't 
follow RCOM procedure? Or just frown at them at WikiSym?). The carrot 
could be a friendly user interface that would give a researcher an easy 
way to sample population and send surveys to it, in exchange of jumping 
through the hoops of whatever RCOM procedure creep becomes. People may 
consider signing up for RCOM review or such if RCOM gives them something 
of value in return. Until this happens, I don't except RCOM will become 
more useful or visible than it has been for the past few years; in fact 
I am predicting the continuation of its decline, as more and more people 
realize its a toothless and basically unnecessary body.


--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/18/2014 01:55, phoebe ayers wrote:


On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 2:38 AM, Heather Ford hfor...@gmail.com 
mailto:hfor...@gmail.com wrote:


Agree with Kerry that we really need to have a more flexible
process that speaks to the main problem that (I think) RCOM was
started to solve i.e. that Wikipedians were getting tired of being
continually contacted by researchers to fill out *surveys*.



That's correct, afaik that was the original motivation, along with 
some of the concerns that Lane/Nathan raised in the other list -- i.e. 
that it was difficult for contributors to tell if a survey was 
ethical, vetted, etc. Frankly, I think some long-term contributors 
just felt jaded -- for a while it seemed there were lots of surveys 
and studies to try to find out things that seemed intuitively obvious 
if you were a participant in the community. I think Heather is right 
that it seems like there have been fewer surveys in recent years, for 
whatever reason.


Part of the problem is a somewhat subtle demographic one: while 
contributors to Wikipedia do turn over, so newer contributors will not 
necessarily have seen lots of surveys, very heavy editors and admins 
(who are often easier to identify) tend to be long-term participants 
who might have been surveyed many times. Additionally, the people who 
follow mailing lists, social media, etc. (or at least the people who 
speak up on those channels) skew towards very-long-term contributors 
who have strong opinions and have seen it all before. So, if you 
advertise your survey on the mailing list, that's the population you 
get, and that's the feedback you get. (But it's a catch-22; there's 
not really other obvious mass channels).


Anyway, this is a hard problem without super-obvious solutions, and 
not one that there's a lot of models for -- very few online projects 
are simultaneously as open with their data and as interesting for 
research purposes!


best,
Phoebe


--
* I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers 
at gmail.com http://gmail.com *



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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-28 Thread Piotr Konieczny
Yep. One of the things that ruffled my feathers about RCOM from early on 
was that without any official community or WMF support, it (or some of 
its members, perhaps not expressing themselves clearly) gave the 
impression that it holds (or should, or want) the power to decide what 
can and cannot be researched with regards to Wikipedia. So, at least as 
far as I am concerned, instead of looking like a 
best-practices-we-want-to-help body, it started to look like 
IRB/Godking-wannabe, offering nothing but promising to contribute to 
instruction/procedure creep.


--

Piotr Konieczny, PhD
http://hanyang.academia.edu/PiotrKonieczny
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gdV8_AEJ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Piotrus

On 7/18/2014 15:36, Federico Leva (Nemo) wrote:

Jonathan Morgan, 17/07/2014 23:37:

But because we /look like /an official body, it's easy to blame us for
failing to prevent disruptive research (if you're a community member),
for rubber stamping research that we like (ditto), or for drowning
research in red tape (if you're a wiki-researcher).

RCOM doesn't *look like* an official body, it claims to be one. With its
current structure, it looks like a WMF staff committee.
https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolution:Wikimedia_Committees#Staff_committees

If you don't want it to look official, it's easy: call it interest
group, add a draft template, add a under pilot warning, call it a
subcommittee of the communications committee (a rather common format).

Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-18 Thread Heather Ford
On 17 July 2014 17:55, phoebe ayers phoebe.w...@gmail.com wrote:


 Part of the problem is a somewhat subtle demographic one: while
 contributors to Wikipedia do turn over, so newer contributors will not
 necessarily have seen lots of surveys, very heavy editors and admins (who
 are often easier to identify) tend to be long-term participants who might
 have been surveyed many times. Additionally, the people who follow mailing
 lists, social media, etc. (or at least the people who speak up on those
 channels) skew towards very-long-term contributors who have strong opinions
 and have seen it all before. So, if you advertise your survey on the
 mailing list, that's the population you get, and that's the feedback you
 get. (But it's a catch-22; there's not really other obvious mass channels).


This is a really important insight, thanks for sharing it, Phoebe. It's
important to work out what the problem is that we're trying to solve before
we try solving it! If the key problem here is that Wikipedians need to be
protected from researchers constantly surveying them, and actually the
wide-ranging surveys are really rare these days, then maybe the problem is
with heavy editors and admins being constantly 'surveyed' (although I'm
guessing that this is not the only research method being used as I talk
about below).

Does anyone know whether this is actually a problem with editors these
days? I know that I have interviewed a bunch of editors over the years
without RCOM approval (some with RCOM approval) and I have only had good
experiences. Sure there were people who didn't want to be interviewed, but
they just ignored my requests - I'm not sure that they would say that they
were bothered enough that an entire process needed to be developed to
approve projects.

I think part of the problem here is that there is a bias towards particular
types of research projects in the way that RCOM was designed. I do both
quantitative and qualitative research on WP and the quantitative research
nowadays focuses mostly on capturing large-scale user actions using the API
or the dumps - I have a feeling that's why there are fewer surveys these
days - more researchers are using the data to conduct research and (right
now) that doesn't require any permissions beyond what is required by uni
ethics board (and all the problems that come with that!).

The projects I do as a qualitative researcher tend to be exploratory. I
will interview people on skype, for example, about their work on particular
articles before I know that I have a project. I could certainly develop a
proposal to RCOM but it would be so wide-ranging that I'm unsure what the
actual benefit was. I think that a much bigger problem is actually
developing community guidelines around ethical treatment of subjects who
don't often realise that their comments and interactions can be legally
(but, I believe not necessarily ethically) used without their permission (I
wrote something about my thoughts on this here [1]).

Basically, I think that we need to reassess what kinds of problems are the
most important ones right now that we want to solve rather than
resuscitating a process that was designed to address a specific type of
problem that was prevalent a long time ago. The new problems that I see
right now that a research community is best placed to solve are things like:

- developing community guidelines for the representation of editors'
identities in research (similar, perhaps to the AOIR guidelines [2]);
- finding ways of making responsible requests to the WMF for data that they
hold that might benefit research outside the WMF;
- developing opportunities for researchers to collaborate and share what
they're doing with the wider research community (as Kerry suggests).

[1]
http://ethnographymatters.net/blog/2013/06/27/onymous-pseudonymous-neither-or-both/

[2] http://aoir.org/reports/ethics2.pdf

Best,
Heather.




 Anyway, this is a hard problem without super-obvious solutions, and not
 one that there's a lot of models for -- very few online projects are
 simultaneously as open with their data and as interesting for research
 purposes!

 best,
 Phoebe


 --
 * I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers
 at gmail.com *

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-18 Thread Aaron Halfaker
 with a bunch of
 different communities like Reddit and GalaxyZoo. What we need are better
 channels as Wikipedia researchers to communicate our needs as researchers
 operating outside the WMF. And preferably in a way that doesn't require us
 to have to travel to Canada to a workshop to do it!

 And, I offered it as a joke but it reminds me of a small, subtle point, I
 think it would be nice if you could offer an invitation to the researchers
 on this list to join the workshop and/or workshop planning when you
 advertise the work you're doing on this. I know it's a wiki and anyone
 could probably join, but I feel like there is enormous possibility for the
 group represented here to feel involved and recognised, and I, for one,
 would like to be invited sometimes.. to the fun stuff, that is, not just
 the hard, arduous stuff :)

 Best,
 Heather.




 On RCOM more generally... I think clarifying the role of the committee,
 and getting a larger and more diverse set of people involved, might help
 make RCOM work. But as Aaron can attest, it is difficult to get people to
 agree on what RCOMs role should be, let alone get them to work for RCOM.

 I've been involved with RCOM for a while, albeit not very actively.
 Unfortunately, I think that the fact that the only people who review
 requests *happen to be** WMF staffers contributes to confusion about
 RCOM's role and it's authority. IMO, if RCOM or any other subject
 recruitment review process is to succeed, we need:

- more wiki-researchers who are willing to regularly participate in
both peer review *and* in developing better process guidelines and
standards (it's really just Aaron right now)
- more *Wikipedians* who are willing to do the same
- some degree of buy-in from the Wikimedia community as a whole. RCOM
needs legitimacy. But where, and from whom? Subject recruitment is a 
 global
concern, but the proposed subject recruitment process is focused on 
 en-wiki
(mostly because that's where most of the relevant research activities 
 *that
we are aware of* are happening). How to make RCOM more global?

 RCOM is in a tough spot right now. We can't force researchers to submit
 their proposals, or abide by the
 suggestions/recommendations/decisions/whatever that result from their
 review. But because we *look like *an official body, it's easy to blame
 us for failing to prevent disruptive research (if you're a community
 member), for rubber stamping research that we like (ditto), or for
 drowning research in red tape (if you're a wiki-researcher).


 - J

 *we were wiki-researchers first!




  Heather Ford
 Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral Programme
 EthnographyMatters http://ethnographymatters.net | Oxford Digital
 Ethnography Group http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115
 http://hblog.org | @hfordsa http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa




 On 17 July 2014 08:49, Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com wrote:

  Yes, I meant the community/communities of WMF. But the authority of
 the community derives from WMF, which chooses to delegate such matters. I
 think that “advise” is a good word to use.



 Kerry




  --

 *From:* Amir E. Aharoni [mailto:amir.ahar...@mail.huji.ac.il]
 *Sent:* Thursday, 17 July 2014 5:37 PM
 *To:* kerry.raym...@gmail.com; Research into Wikimedia content and
 communities

 *Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys



  WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can
 and cannot recruit me for whatever purposes.

 I don't think that it really should be about WMF. The WMF shouldn't
 enforce anything. The community can formulate good practices for
 researchers and _advise_ community members not to cooperate with
 researchers who don't follow these practices. Not much more is needed.



 --
 Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
 http://aharoni.wordpress.com
 ‪“We're living in pieces,
 I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore



 2014-07-17 8:24 GMT+03:00 Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com:

  Just saying here what I already put on the Talk page:



 I am a little bothered by the opening sentence This page documents the
 process that researchers must follow before asking Wikipedia contributors
 to participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and
 experiments.

 WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can and
 cannot recruit me for whatever purposes. What WMF does own is its
 communication channels to me as a contributor and WMF has a right to
 control what occurs on those channels. Also I think WMF probably should be
 concerned about both its readers and its contributors being recruited
 through its channels (as either might be being recruited). I think this
 distinction should be made, e.g.

 This page documents the process that researchers must follow if they
 wish to use Wikipedia's (WMF's?) communication channels to recruit people
 to participate in research

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-18 Thread Jonathan Morgan
On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 11:36 PM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Jonathan Morgan, 17/07/2014 23:37:
  But because we /look like /an official body, it's easy to blame us for
  failing to prevent disruptive research (if you're a community member),
  for rubber stamping research that we like (ditto), or for drowning
  research in red tape (if you're a wiki-researcher).

 RCOM doesn't *look like* an official body, it claims to be one. With its
 current structure, it looks like a WMF staff committee.

 https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolution:Wikimedia_Committees#Staff_committees

 If you don't want it to look official, it's easy: call it interest
 group, add a draft template, add a under pilot warning, call it a
 subcommittee of the communications committee (a rather common format).


Heh. Well, I wasn't aware it was I was participating in an official body.
Does that mean I get to review proposals under my staff account now? :P

I suppose if *I'm *this confused about RCOM's role, I shouldn't be
surprised that others are too.

- J

-- 
Jonathan T. Morgan
Learning Strategist
Wikimedia Foundation
User:Jmorgan (WMF) https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Jmorgan_(WMF)
jmor...@wikimedia.org
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-17 Thread Aaron Halfaker
 and that a new, more lightweight process was being designed. As
 Nathan discusses on the Wikimedia-l list, there aren't many indications
 that RCOM is still active. Perhaps there has been a recent decision to
 resuscitate it? If that's the case, let us know about it :) And then we can
 discuss what needs to happen to build a good process.

 One immediate requirement that I've been talking to others about is
 finding ways of making the case to the WMF as a group of researchers for
 the anonymization of country level data, for example. I've spoken to a few
 researchers (and I myself made a request about a year ago that hasn't been
 responded to) and it seems like some work is required by the foundation to
 do this anonymisation but that there are a few of us who would be really
 keen to use this data to produce research very valuable to Wikipedia -
 especially from smaller language versions/developing countries. Having an
 official process that assesses how worthwhile this investment of time would
 be to the Foundation would be a great idea, I think, but right now there
 seems to be a general focus on the research that the Foundation does itself
 rather than enabling researchers outside. I know how busy Aaron and Dario
 (and others in the team) are so perhaps this requires a new position to
 coordinate between researchers and Foundation resources?

 Anyway, I think the big question right now is whether there are any plans
 for RCOM that have been made by the research team and the only people who
 can answer that are folks in the research team :)

 Best,
 Heather.

 Heather Ford
 Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral Programme
 EthnographyMatters http://ethnographymatters.net | Oxford Digital
 Ethnography Group http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115
 http://hblog.org | @hfordsa http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa




 On 17 July 2014 08:49, Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com wrote:

  Yes, I meant the community/communities of WMF. But the authority of the
 community derives from WMF, which chooses to delegate such matters. I think
 that “advise” is a good word to use.



 Kerry




  --

 *From:* Amir E. Aharoni [mailto:amir.ahar...@mail.huji.ac.il]
 *Sent:* Thursday, 17 July 2014 5:37 PM
 *To:* kerry.raym...@gmail.com; Research into Wikimedia content and
 communities

 *Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys



  WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can and
 cannot recruit me for whatever purposes.

 I don't think that it really should be about WMF. The WMF shouldn't
 enforce anything. The community can formulate good practices for
 researchers and _advise_ community members not to cooperate with
 researchers who don't follow these practices. Not much more is needed.



 --
 Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
 http://aharoni.wordpress.com
 ‪“We're living in pieces,
 I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore



 2014-07-17 8:24 GMT+03:00 Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com:

  Just saying here what I already put on the Talk page:



 I am a little bothered by the opening sentence This page documents the
 process that researchers must follow before asking Wikipedia contributors
 to participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and
 experiments.

 WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can and
 cannot recruit me for whatever purposes. What WMF does own is its
 communication channels to me as a contributor and WMF has a right to
 control what occurs on those channels. Also I think WMF probably should be
 concerned about both its readers and its contributors being recruited
 through its channels (as either might be being recruited). I think this
 distinction should be made, e.g.

 This page documents the process that researchers must follow if they
 wish to use Wikipedia's (WMF's?) communication channels to recruit people
 to participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and
 experiments. Communication channels include its mailing lists, its Project
 pages, Talk pages, and User Talk pages [and whatever else I've forgotten].



 If researchers want to recruit WPians via non-WMF means, I don’t think
 it’s any business of WMF’s. An example might be a researcher who wanted to
 contact WPians via chapters or thorgs; I would leave it for the
 chapter/thorg to decide if they wanted to assist the researcher via their
 communication channels.



 Of course, the practical reality of it is that some researchers
 (oblivious of WMF’s concerns in relation to recruitment of WPians to
 research projects) will simply use WMF’s channels without asking nicely
 first. Obviously we can remove such requests on-wiki and follow up any
 email requests with the commentary that this was not an approved request.
 In my category of [whatever else I’ve forgotten], I guess there are things
 like Facebook groups and any other social media presence.



 Also to be practical, if WMF

Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-17 Thread Aaron Halfaker
/Wikipedian_checklist

 When you review these docs and the corresponding conversations, please
 keep in mind that I was a new Wikipedian for the development of WP:SRAG and
 WP:Research, so I made some really critical mistakes -- like taking
 hyperbolic criticism of the proposals personally. :\

 So what now?  Well, in the meantime, if you let me know about some subject
 recruitment you want to do, I'll help you find someone to coordinate a
 review that fits within the process described in the RCom docs.  In the
 short term, are any of you folks interested in going through some
 iterations of the new WP:Research_recruitment policy doc?

 -Aaron


 On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 2:38 AM, Heather Ford hfor...@gmail.com wrote:

 Agree with Kerry that we really need to have a more flexible process that
 speaks to the main problem that (I think) RCOM was started to solve i.e.
 that Wikipedians were getting tired of being continually contacted by
 researchers to fill out *surveys*. I'm not sure where feelings are about
 that right now (I certainly haven't seen a huge amount of surveys myself)
 but I guess the big question right now is whether RCOM is actually active
 or not. I must say that I was surprised, Aaron, when I read that it is
 active because I had heard from others in your team about a year or two ago
 that this wasn't going to be the vehicle for obtaining permission going
 forward and that a new, more lightweight process was being designed. As
 Nathan discusses on the Wikimedia-l list, there aren't many indications
 that RCOM is still active. Perhaps there has been a recent decision to
 resuscitate it? If that's the case, let us know about it :) And then we can
 discuss what needs to happen to build a good process.

 One immediate requirement that I've been talking to others about is
 finding ways of making the case to the WMF as a group of researchers for
 the anonymization of country level data, for example. I've spoken to a few
 researchers (and I myself made a request about a year ago that hasn't been
 responded to) and it seems like some work is required by the foundation to
 do this anonymisation but that there are a few of us who would be really
 keen to use this data to produce research very valuable to Wikipedia -
 especially from smaller language versions/developing countries. Having an
 official process that assesses how worthwhile this investment of time would
 be to the Foundation would be a great idea, I think, but right now there
 seems to be a general focus on the research that the Foundation does itself
 rather than enabling researchers outside. I know how busy Aaron and Dario
 (and others in the team) are so perhaps this requires a new position to
 coordinate between researchers and Foundation resources?

 Anyway, I think the big question right now is whether there are any plans
 for RCOM that have been made by the research team and the only people who
 can answer that are folks in the research team :)

 Best,
 Heather.

 Heather Ford
 Oxford Internet Institute http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk Doctoral Programme
 EthnographyMatters http://ethnographymatters.net | Oxford Digital
 Ethnography Group http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=115
 http://hblog.org | @hfordsa http://www.twitter.com/hfordsa




 On 17 July 2014 08:49, Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com wrote:

  Yes, I meant the community/communities of WMF. But the authority of
 the community derives from WMF, which chooses to delegate such matters. I
 think that “advise” is a good word to use.



 Kerry




  --

 *From:* Amir E. Aharoni [mailto:amir.ahar...@mail.huji.ac.il]
 *Sent:* Thursday, 17 July 2014 5:37 PM
 *To:* kerry.raym...@gmail.com; Research into Wikimedia content and
 communities

 *Subject:* Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys



  WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can
 and cannot recruit me for whatever purposes.

 I don't think that it really should be about WMF. The WMF shouldn't
 enforce anything. The community can formulate good practices for
 researchers and _advise_ community members not to cooperate with
 researchers who don't follow these practices. Not much more is needed.



 --
 Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
 http://aharoni.wordpress.com
 ‪“We're living in pieces,
 I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore



 2014-07-17 8:24 GMT+03:00 Kerry Raymond kerry.raym...@gmail.com:

  Just saying here what I already put on the Talk page:



 I am a little bothered by the opening sentence This page documents the
 process that researchers must follow before asking Wikipedia contributors
 to participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and
 experiments.

 WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can and
 cannot recruit me for whatever purposes. What WMF does own is its
 communication channels to me as a contributor and WMF has a right to
 control what occurs on those channels. Also I think WMF probably should

[Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-16 Thread phoebe ayers
Hi all,

FYI, for those who do not regularly follow wikimedia-l, there's a
discussion going on there about Wikipedia surveys (sparked off by one
particular survey) that may be of interest to this list. See
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-l/2014-July/073367.html

Briefly, the meta-question seems to be: we set up some researcher best
practices such that researchers should get approval via RCOM, but that
process is now not active. So now what? What should researchers do?

(Personally, I think the answer should be to resuscitate RCOM, but that's
easy to say and harder to do!)

-- phoebe

-- 
* I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers at
gmail.com *
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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-16 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)
phoebe ayers, 16/07/2014 19:21:
 (Personally, I think the answer should be to resuscitate RCOM, but
 that's easy to say and harder to do!)

IMHO in the meanwhile the most useful thing folks can do is subscribing
to the feed of new research pages:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:NewPagesfeed=atomhidebots=1hideredirs=1limit=500offset=namespace=202
It's easier to build a functioning RCOM out of an active community of
reviewers, than the other way round.

Nemo

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Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

2014-07-16 Thread Kerry Raymond
Just saying here what I already put on the Talk page:

 

I am a little bothered by the opening sentence This page documents the
process that researchers must follow before asking Wikipedia contributors to
participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and
experiments.

WMF does not own me as a contributor; it does not decide who can and
cannot recruit me for whatever purposes. What WMF does own is its
communication channels to me as a contributor and WMF has a right to control
what occurs on those channels. Also I think WMF probably should be concerned
about both its readers and its contributors being recruited through its
channels (as either might be being recruited). I think this distinction
should be made, e.g.

This page documents the process that researchers must follow if they wish
to use Wikipedia's (WMF's?) communication channels to recruit people to
participate in research studies such as surveys, interviews and experiments.
Communication channels include its mailing lists, its Project pages, Talk
pages, and User Talk pages [and whatever else I've forgotten]. 

 

If researchers want to recruit WPians via non-WMF means, I don't think it's
any business of WMF's. An example might be a researcher who wanted to
contact WPians via chapters or thorgs; I would leave it for the
chapter/thorg to decide if they wanted to assist the researcher via their
communication channels.

 

Of course, the practical reality of it is that some researchers (oblivious
of WMF's concerns in relation to recruitment of WPians to research projects)
will simply use WMF's channels without asking nicely first. Obviously we can
remove such requests on-wiki and follow up any email requests with the
commentary that this was not an approved request. In my category of
[whatever else I've forgotten], I guess there are things like Facebook
groups and any other social media presence.

 

Also to be practical, if WMF is to have a process to vet research surveys, I
think it has to be sufficiently fast and not be overly demanding to avoid
the possibility of the researcher giving up (too hard to deal with these
people) and simply spamming email, project pages, social media in the hope
of recruiting some participants regardless. That is, if we make it too
slow/hard to do the right thing, we effectively encourage doing the wrong
thing. Also, what value-add can we give them to reward those who do the
right thing? It's nice to have a carrot as well as a stick when it comes to
onerous processes :-)

 

Because of the criticism of not giving back, could we perhaps do things to
try to make the researcher feel part of the community to make giving back
more likely? For example, could we give them a slot every now and again to
talk about their project in the RD Showcase? Encourage them to be on this
mailing list. Are we at a point where it might make sense to organise a
Wikipedia research conference to help build a research community? Just
thinking aloud here .

 

Kerry

 

 

  _  

From: wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Aaron
Halfaker
Sent: Thursday, 17 July 2014 6:59 AM
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] discussion about wikipedia surveys

 

RCOM review is still alive and looking for new reviewers (really,
coordinators).  Researchers can be directed to me or Dario
(dtarabore...@wikimedia.org) to be assigned a reviewer.  There is also a
proposed policy on enwiki that could use some eyeballs:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Research_recruitment

 

On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 11:16 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemow...@gmail.com
wrote:

phoebe ayers, 16/07/2014 19:21:

 (Personally, I think the answer should be to resuscitate RCOM, but
 that's easy to say and harder to do!)

IMHO in the meanwhile the most useful thing folks can do is subscribing
to the feed of new research pages:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:NewPages
https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:NewPagesfeed=atomhid
ebots=1hideredirs=1limit=500offset=namespace=202
feed=atomhidebots=1hideredirs=1limit=500offset=namespace=202
It's easier to build a functioning RCOM out of an active community of
reviewers, than the other way round.

Nemo

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