Not answering your question about studies, but I think your assumption that an 
editor has some kind of "normal" edit size dictated solely by tenure/experience 
might not be valid.

I would note that even for the same contributor, there are different kinds of 
contribution and these will have different patterns and hence sizes. For 
example, I think of myself principally as a content writer but I also manage a 
large watchlist. I would be very surprised if my edit size didn't vary between 
depending on the task. When content writing, I am likely to  large positive 
size edits (as I am adding content), but I'm human and make mistakes, so a 
large edit might be followed by some smaller copyedits. But when I am managing 
my watchlist, my edits will most often be deleting material (vandalism, spam, 
uncited dubious claims or opinions) so I would imagine that I would mostly do 
negative size edits. When I am doing some task in AutoWikiBrowser usually to do 
maintenance across a set of articles (e.g. replace a changed domain name in 
citation URLs or rename links because of a page move), it will probably show a 
long run of same/similar sized edits, which might be positive or negative in 
size depending on the relative length of the old/new text.

You may need to consider a couple more variables that come from the tags on the 
edits, such as using visual editor and mobile editors, as the tool you use to 
edit does alter the way you edit. For example, if I click a section edit in 
source editor, I only get to edit that section so I may do a number of section 
edits to complete an overall task. If I am using visual editor, it always open 
the whole article and so I may do the complete task in a single edit. If I am 
on a mobile device, I will usually do the minimal edit necessary (because it is 
so hard to edit that way) and come back later on my laptop to finish the task 
properly, so I might remove some incorrect information with the mobile edit (as 
leaving it place misleads the reader) but wait until later to add the correct 
information as adding the citations for the correct information on a mobile 
device is just too hard for me.

Finally if I am on a poor Internet connection, I will tend to publish 
frequently for fear of losing my work. If I am on a good Internet connection, I 
become complacent and publish less frequently. If a person is only a Visual 
Editor user, then they probably rely on its ability to recover a partial edit 
if the session terminates unexpectedly and may be less inclined to publish 
frequently.

I also do training for new users. And new users exhibit a range of behaviours. 
Some publish very frequently. Add one sentence, publish, add the citation, 
publish, replace a word, publish. Others forget to publish at all.

And finally if you have an editor with edit-count-itis, expect them to do a lot 
of small edits using tools to implement lots of minor changes of little net 
value, because their goal is simply to increase their edit count (and hence 
their ego) in the guise of contributing. I often think it might be a good idea 
to hide the edit count statistic; while we might lose a lot of edits as a 
result, we probably wouldn't miss them and the rest of us would waste less time 
as our watchlists would not get inflated by these massive number of trivial 
changes.

Finally I note it is easier to know the number of bytes changed with each edit 
(the change in the size of the article wikitext) than it is to know the number 
of words changed as that involves comparison of the text. Which is easy I guess 
for straight text "how now brown cow" is 4 words but how many words change when 
using templates, citations, etc, is it the number of words in the wikitext or 
the number of words rendered to the reader? If I change a template definition, 
I can alter the number of words in thousands of Wikipedia articles that 
transclude it.

Kerry


-----Original Message-----
From: Wiki-research-l [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Haifeng Zhang
Sent: Saturday, 8 June 2019 7:44 AM
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [Wiki-research-l] Research on Edit Size

Dear folks,

Are there studies that have examined what might affect edit size (e.g., # of 
words add/delete/modify in each revision). I am especially interested in the 
impact of editor's tenure/experience.

Thanks,
Haifeng Zhang
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