Help:Wikipedia editing for researchers, scholars, and academics

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

If you are a professional researcher, engineer, mathematician, scholar, graduate student, or other academic, you are very likely already familiar with writing survey articles and survey sections of research articles. Writing a Wikipedia article is almost the same, but there are a few differences that it might be helpful to know about before you start.

Welcome to Wikipedia; we greatly appreciate your desire to help build and maintain the encyclopedia!

Why?

You already have other avenues for publishing your writing professionally, and plenty of demands on your time. Why should you take the extra time to write for Wikipedia as well?

  • Public service. Part of being an academic is communicating to the public, and Wikipedia is a great way of writing about research in a way that can be found and read by the public.
  • Give and take. As a researcher you are benefiting from a vast collection of survey articles written by the Wikipedia community. Why not reciprocate and help improve the existing articles by sharing your knowledge?
  • Righting wrongs. You've probably already found some important topics that you know about from your research that are missing from Wikipedia, or worse, described incorrectly. Who better than someone who knows about these topics professionally to repair the damage?
  • Practice. To write well on Wikipedia, you have to pay more attention to matters of readability than you might when writing for your peers. Practicing your writing ability in this way is likely to cause your professional writing to improve.
  • Broaden your knowledge. When you write about a topic, you learn about it yourself; you may well find the topics you write about useful later in your own research. Also, when you carefully survey a topic, you are likely to find out about what is not known as well as what is known, and this could help you find future research projects.
  • It looks good on your vita. Actually, I don't think any tenure committee is going to care about your Wikipedia contributions (but see). And in most cases the fact that you've contributed to an article is invisible to most readers, so it's also not going to do much for making you more famous. But recently the NSF has started to take "broader impacts" more seriously on grant applications, and if you can make a convincing case that your Wikipedia editing activity is significant enough to count as a broader impact then that will probably improve your chances of getting funding. And getting more funding really does look good on your vita.
  • Your advisor asked you to. This may or may not be a good reason, depending on what your advisor asked you to edit. Articles about a general subject area that you're starting to learn about in your own research, as a way of making a public contribution while helping you learn: good. Articles about your advisor (example) or their own research:
    not so good
    .

Do not go into Wikipedia for the purpose of boosting its coverage of you as a person or of your research publications. It can be OK to

deleted. As in academia, conflicts of interest
must be declared.

Experts are not expected to have

neutral point of view
.

How to get started editing

If you intend to edit Wikipedia more than once or twice, and especially if you ever intend to create new articles, there are

prefer to using your real name
.

There are two ways to edit. If you generally write using a

Visual Editor. If you prefer a WYSIWYM environment such as LaTeX, or know HTML markup, you may prefer to use wiki markup. Click the "Edit" tab, top right; if you are not logged in to an account, a popup will offer the choice. If you have logged in, you can set your editing mode at Special:Preferences
.

For markup, there is a quick cheatsheet of common markup. There are also extensive tutorials on editing.

Social connections

Wikimania Conference[1]

As in academia, newcomers may expect help from established members of the community. You can ask for help at the Wikipedia:Teahouse and a variety of other places. You can even find an experienced Wikipedia editor to act as your Wikipedia-editing supervisor while you learn the basics.

Many cities have face-to-face

Edit-a-thons. There is a global annual academic conference called Wikimania
.

One way to stay connected to the greater Wikipedia community is through discipline-specific

, Wikipedia:WikiProject Physics, and more specialized projects such as Wikipedia:WikiProject Academic Journals.

The discussion pages for these projects are a good place to ask about the details of formatting articles for that discipline, for finding other editors to help fix problems you've found, and to find out about articles in need of work. For longer lists of projects that might be relevant to your interests, browse the Wikiproject directory, or search.

If you register a username, you can make it easier for fellow editors who need your expertise to find you, by adding your userpage to expertise categories, such as Category:Wikipedian anthropologists.

There is no formal way to verify account

credentials
, and your level of knowledge will be apparent in your edits and discussions. Other editors will tend to respect your knowledge and writing skill more than your formal qualifications.

When you create or make significant changes to an article, you may want to put it on your watchlist.

Copying

Don't

from other Wikipedia articles may be ok (but usually you are required to state the source of the copied text in the edit summary). Copying or closely paraphrasing your own words
, if they appear in a publication that you don't own the copyright of, may not be allowed.

Copying (with attribution) from

CC BY-SA is allowed, even if they are not your own work. See, for instance, the Commons:User:Open Access Media Importer Bot. However, licenses prohibiting commercial use or derivative works are not compatible with Wikipedia (Wikipedia is used commercially, and is itself a derivative work). Attributed short quotes of copyright materials may be fair use. Copyright assistance
is available to editors.

Sourcing, verifiability, and notability

Citations
are crucial in Wikipedia writing. In other kinds of academic writing, citations are used mainly to give proper credit for the origin of an idea. In Wikipedia, citations can be used for this purpose, but more often they serve two other purposes:

  • Verifiability. A reader with some level of lay knowledge (e.g., scientific literacy) but without your specialized training should be able to tell whether what you wrote is true by comparing it against the sources you cite.
  • Notability. The main grounds for inclusion of a topic in Wikipedia are that the topic is the subject of multiple published works that are independent of each other. By providing published sources about the topic, you can convince other Wikipedia editors that it's an important enough topic to include in the encyclopedia, and forestall them from trying to delete your content.

Wikipedia articles therefore tend to have a higher citation density than research articles and survey articles. In a research article, much of the content is likely to be original and unsourced, and even in a survey article, you would probably feel free to make up small unsourced derivations that are more than a

do this in Wikipedia
.

Everything in Wikipedia should ideally have

footnotes
that refer to the list of references at the end. The trustworthiness of a Wikipedia article is based on the authority of the sources, not the authority of the author.

Ideally, every paragraph of a Wikipedia article (outside of the initial summary paragraph) should have at least one footnote or other source, and in many cases every sentence will have its own source. The general citation guidelines and scientific citation guidelines give more guidance on what does and doesn't need a source.

Living people

See Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons

For articles about living people, the rules for citing are much stricter: articles without citations and controversial unsourced statements within an article are both subject to deletion. The threshold for how significant an academic should be to warrant having a Wikipedia article about them is, very roughly, at the level one would expect of a full professor at a major research university; see Wikipedia:Notability (academics) for more detailed guidance.

Choosing sources

Survey/review articles and textbooks usually make the best sources. Journal articles, research monographs, and edited volumes are also pretty good sources, but it is not safe to rely on a single journal article on a controversial topic (because the author may be on one side). Articles in newspapers and magazines about scientific results can also be good sources, but are better for establishing notability than for verifiability (the popular press often gets the science wrong). Try to avoid using self-published lecture notes and web pages as sources (but do use them in Further reading and External links).

If you have a choice between citing something to a textbook and to the original research paper it was published in, cite both: the research paper is an important part of the history of the subject, but the textbook will be better at convincing other editors that the subject is important, better at making the subject verifiable, and probably better at helping novices learn more about the subject. For more on selecting sources, see Wikipedia:Reliable sources, and for an

scientific and medical
topics are also available.

Citation formatting

See also Wikipedia:Citing sources

Wikipedia is not as fussy about citation formats as an academic journal. Any functional format can be used. The main thing is just to make sure that everything has a source, and that the citation to the source is complete enough that others can figure out what it is.

You can take one of the

wiki markup
, citation information may additionally be entered manually, between <ref>...</ref> tags.

It is rarely necessary to type in the full citation information. Entering only a

Visual Editor or a robot complete your citation. Failing that, another human editor
can tidy your citations, as long as they are comprehensible.

In wiki markup,

, which can be used in any browser.

Peer review

You don't need permission to add or remove content from Wikipedia; Wikipedia uses

reliable sources
, published material in journals, books, theses, newspapers, etc., that says what you want the article to say.

Unlike some other sites, Wikipedia does not permit any one editor to

fight
when it happens.

The peer review on Wikipedia can be harsh. Your edits may be reverted by automated tools designed to rapidly remove large volumes of

shows that, sadly, a lot of good would-be contributors disengage rather than discuss when their contributions are rejected.

Wikipedia has a fair number of editors with high-functioning autism and Asperger's. A bit of knowledge and intelligent accommodation can avoid and resolve communications difficulties.

Style and formatting

The general style of Wikipedia articles is laid out in Wikipedia:Manual of Style. A more specific guide is Wikipedia:Make technical articles understandable. These Wikipedia-internal best practices are a careful balance of compromises, and they generally do not match in every detail what is preferred in any particular discipline. Here are some issues that are a little different from other kinds of academic writing.

Wikipedia-integrated scholarly work

Wikipedia is an

synthesis of the research literature, you may do this on Wikipedia's sister projects
.

Several academic journals now provide a dual-publishing model where suitable academic review articles are published as a stable, indexed version of record, and also copied as a Wikipedia page.[2] These generate a citeable version of the article for the author as well as providing peer-reviewed content for the encyclopedia.

Examples include:

Wikipedia articles can be submitted to WikiJournals via the nominations page. The WikiJournals are diamond/platinum open-access: they do not charge any fees. The peer reviewers are volunteers, and the costs paid by the Wikimedia Foundation, the same charity that funds Wikipedia.

See also

A short presentation on Wikipedia editing for academics
A short presentation on Wikidata editing for academics

For medical topics:

Further reading

  • Logan, Darren W.; Sandal, Massimo; Gardner, Paul P.; Manske, Magnus; Bateman, Alex (2010), "
    PMID 20941386
    .
  • Corbyn, Zoe (March 29, 2011), "Wikipedia wants more contributions from academics", The Guardian.
  • Masukume, G.; Kipersztok, L.; Das, D.; Shafee, T.; Laurent, M.; Heilman, J. (November 2016), "Medical journals and Wikipedia: a global health matter", The Lancet Global Health, 4 (11): e791,
    PMID 27765289
  • Azzam, Amin; Bresler, David; Leon, Armando; Maggio, Lauren; Whitaker, Evans; Heilman, James; Orlowitz, Jake; Swisher, Valerie; Rasberry, Lane; Otoide, Kingsley; Trotter, Fred; Ross, Will; McCue, Jack D. (2016), "Why Medical Schools Should Embrace Wikipedia" (PDF), Academic Medicine, 92 (2): 194–200,
    PMID 27627633
  • Bond, Alexander L. (2011), "Why ornithologists should embrace and contribute to Wikipedia", Ibis, 153 (3): 640–641,
  • Goldstein, Evan B. (2017), Three Reasons Why Earth Scientists Should Edit Wikipedia

Notes

  1. ^ His blog post on the conference
  2. ^ Shafee, Thomas (2017-11-24). "Wikipedia-integrated publishing: a comparison of successful models" (PDF). Health Inform. 26 (2). .
  3. ^ Wodak, Shoshana J.; Mietchen, Daniel; Collings, Andrew M.; Russell, Robert B.; Bourne, Philip E. (2012-03-29). "Topic Pages: PLoS Computational Biology Meets Wikipedia".
    PMID 22479174
    .
  4. ^ Luk, Ann (2017-04-12). "Continuing to Bridge the Journal-Wikipedia Gap: Introducing Topic Pages for PLOS Genetics". PLOS Biologue. Retrieved 2018-03-21.
  5. ^ Tsueng, Ginger; Good, Benjamin M.; Ping, Peipei; Golemis, Erica; Hanukoglu, Israel; Wijnen, Andre J. van; Su, Andrew I. (2016-11-05). "Gene Wiki Reviews—Raising the quality and accessibility of information about the human genome". Gene. 592 (2): 235–238.
    PMID 27150585
    .
  6. ^ Butler, Declan (2008-12-16). "Publish in Wikipedia or perish". Nature News. .
  7. ^ Shafee, Thomas; Das, Diptanshu; Masukume, Gwinyai; Häggström, Mikael (2017-01-15). "WikiJournal of Medicine, the first Wikipedia-integrated academic journal". WikiJournal of Medicine. 4 (1): 1. .
  8. ^ Editorial Board (2018-06-01). "The aims and scope of WikiJournal of Science". WikiJournal of Science. 1 (1): 1.
    S2CID 189736287
    .