Hello Andrew,

I am not quite sure if this is what you are looking for. A general
framework for Wikipedia research... I wonder how general that can be.
Some authors have tried to make use of systems theory, but this is not
what I would recommend.
It all depends what your research is about, so the framework would
come from media science? computer science? social science?
linguistics? etc.

A book I that I found useful for my thought process was this one:

Jerome Kagan: The Three Cultures. Natural Sciences, Social Sciences,
and the Humanities in the 21st Century. Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge et.al. 2009.

It reminded me of the different approaches that are common in
different disciplines.

In "Wikis und die Wikipedia verstehen" I have written some lines about
it, here in a rough semi-automatic translation. See below.

Kind regards
Ziko

>>
Kagan speaks of "three cultures" that offer different approaches to
reality. The three cultures differ in which main questions are asked
in a science, which sources are collected, and what control one has
over the circumstances under which evidence is collected, to what
degree one generalizes, to what extent one takes into account
historical phenomena, and what importance one attaches to ethical
values. Kagan suspects that humanists and social scientists are more
similar to each other in their ideas and methods than they are to the
natural scientists (Kagan 2009: 2/3). If necessary, one can speak of a
socio-cultural approach.

Natural scientists, according to Kagan, are concerned with predicting
and explaining natural phenomena. One observes the material in a
controlled way in experiments and works in both small and large
groups. Scholars in the Humanities are interested in how people react
to events and what meaning they ascribe to an experience. Historical
circumstances and the influence of the ethical are of the highest
importance to them. They usually work alone and delight in
"semantically coherent arguments described in elegant prose." Social
scientists are concerned with the predictability and explanation of
human behavior (ibid.: 4/5).

In this book, therefore, we distinguish between the following three
levels or dimensions in which wiki-related phenomena take place or can
be described.

- The technical dimension refers to the technical and scientific
subjects, including subjects from computer science and mathematics.
One focus is the wiki as a technical medium including user accounts
and pages.
- The cultural dimension deals with typical humanities issues,
especially with regard to the wiki content.
- The (human) social dimension is concerned with the social relations
between the actors. This communicative dimension is to be understood
comprehensively, and it deals not only with questions of the actual
social sciences, but also of law and politics.
<<




Am Do., 3. Feb. 2022 um 17:28 Uhr schrieb Andrew Green <[email protected]>:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I hope this is the right place to ask this question!
>
> I was wondering if folks who are doing (or are interested in) research
> about Wikipedia might like to share texts that they feel best describe
> the general research frameworks they use (or might like to use).
>
> I'd love to hear about any texts you like, regardless of format
> (textbook, paper, general reference, blog post, etc.).
>
> It seems a lot of work about Wikipedia uses approaches from
> Computational Social Science. The main references I have for that are
> [1] and [2].
>
> I'm especially interested in links between Computational Social Science
> and frameworks from more traditional social sciences and cognitive science.
>
> Many thanks in advance!!!!! :) Cheers,
> Andrew
>
> [1] Cioffi-Revilla, C. (2017) /Introduction to Computational Social
> Science. Principles and Applications. Second Edition./ Cham,
> Switzerland: Springer.
>
> [2] Melnik, R. (ed.) (2015)/Mathematical and Computational Modeling.
> With Applications in Natural and Social Sciences, Engineering, and the
> Arts/. Hoboken, U.S.A.: Wiley.
>
> --
> Andrew Green (he/him)
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