Talk:Boyle

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Requested move 5 January 2024

The following is a closed discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review after discussing it on the closer's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

– No clear primary topic, the surname has 346 views but the County Roscommon one has 1,734, the Alberta one has 183, the Mississippi one has 85, the Kansas one has 13 and the crater has 8[[1]]. Crouch, Swale (talk) 22:13, 5 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Note: WikiProject Disambiguation has been notified of this discussion. Vanderwaalforces (talk) 23:40, 5 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The move would also lead to a removal of direct links to Robert, Danny, Charles and whatever other targets that we already know attract larger or comparable interest from readers compared to the entire non-anthroponymy group, because the disambiguation guideline doesn't allow for that at this time. This would definitely impede navigation in this thankfully measurable way. (Oppose)
Likewise, if we look at the page view statistics for all items as opposed to just the hatnote'd group, and we look at all-time statistics and not just the latest 20 days, we get this list and this list and this list. In the former list we can see:
  • Susan Boyle 2,856 / day
  • Lara Flynn Boyle 2,548 / day
  • Danny Boyle 2,108 / day
  • Peter Boyle 2,018 / day
  • Frankie Boyle 826 / day
  • Robert Boyle 610 / day
  • Zoe Boyle 316 / day
...and so forth. In the latter two lists we can see:
  • Boyle's law 1,423 / day
  • Boyle Heights, Los Angeles 209 / day
  • Boyle, County Roscommon 84 / day
  • Boyle River (Ireland) 3 / day
  • Boyle River (New Zealand) 3 / day
The article on Boyle's law does not refer mononymously to the law, as just "Boyle", though it does refer mononymously to its eponym, Robert Boyle. The article on Boyle Heights doesn't seem to refer to the place mononymously as Boyle, though it does refer mononymously to its eponym, Andrew Boyle. There are vague mononymous references in the names of North Boyle Avenue and South Boyle Avenue, though those could also be references to Andrew Boyle, too.
So, we're left with the idea that we're not navigating well enough to a town in Ireland with a population of 3k, which is plausible, but with the ratios of 30 : 1 and similar just between individual items, let alone the overall statistics, it's actually borderline ridiculous. What we're actually not navigating well enough are probably some of these biographies, and there's a possibility that the reader is already not given a good enough impression of what "Boyle" typically means even now.
This is yet another in a long line of cases where we would allow this
WP:NAMELIST-inspired apparent nonsense to make navigation worse. I feel like these discussions are becoming repetitive, and we really need to fix the guidelines to try to curb further waste of volunteer time. --Joy (talk) 09:31, 6 January 2024 (UTC)[reply
]
The reason I rail about the name list guideline is because our boundaries between anthroponymy articles and various anthroponymy navigation aids are rather blurry, cf. recent discussion at Wikipedia talk:Content assessment#Request for comment. In this case it's pretty obvious that Boyle is an Irish name, so that concept as a primary topic would be pretty obvious, as that's the obvious pattern for the people, the town, the river, etc. But the way we organize articles right now means that we have to split things up by type, which then creates this artificial dilemma about what to put where. This is indicative of a suboptimally designed system. --Joy (talk) 14:06, 7 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
BTW, from the clickstream archive, sorted list of most common identified outgoing clickstreams:
  • August '23: Boyle_(disambiguation) link 34, Robert_Boyle link 27, T._C._Boyle link 14, Robert_Boyle_(disambiguation) link 12, Danny_Boyle link 11
  • September '23: Boyle_(disambiguation) link 22, Robert_Boyle link 19, Robert_Boyle_(disambiguation) link 13, Charles_Boyle link 12, Boyle,_County_Roscommon link 11, Clan_Boyle link 10
  • November '23: Robert_Boyle link 19, Boyle_(disambiguation) link 15, Robert_Boyle_(disambiguation) link 12, Clan_Boyle link 12, Charles_Boyle link 12, Boyle's_law other 12, Danny_Boyle link 11, Boyle,_County_Roscommon link 11, O'Boyle link 10
  • December '23: Boyle Boyle_(disambiguation) link 30, Robert_Boyle link 14, Charles_Boyle link 12
While we don't see the entries <10 because of the anonymization threshold, the pattern is still pretty consistent - there's very little reason to believe that we ought to do much more to help readers navigate to the place over the people. Moving the town link from See also to the hatnote might help its numbers move up a tad. --Joy (talk) 14:30, 11 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose. The name is the clear primary topic by long-term significance. In fact, I might even say that Robert Boyle should be a primary redirect. -- Necrothesp (talk) 13:29, 8 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Leaning support. There are surnames that are clearly primarily surnames by their construction, like Anderson or Jameson (both dabs anyway) or O'Connor or Lubański, but this is not so clearly one of them. BD2412 T 15:08, 19 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    @BD2412 So... we're supposed to be prejudiced against some surnames because they don't look like a very typically constructed surname? :) --Joy (talk) 09:08, 26 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    @Joy: Well, let's extrapolate from this. Should we treat all atypically constructed surnames primarily as surnames? For example, Mercury is a surname; Bok is a surname; Caron is a surname; etc. BD2412 T 14:36, 26 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Well, if it wasn't clear already, I don't think we should be inferring or extrapolating anything when we can simply analyze the information pertinent to this specific term. --Joy (talk) 16:11, 26 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support per nom. No primary topic here.  — Amakuru (talk) 13:07, 5 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

post-move

After the recent move, we have two thirds of the month of February with new stats. The clickstreams for that month are now generated (also rendered at https://wikinav.toolforge.org/?language=en&title=Boyle), and we can see 416 incoming views, with the following identifiable outgoing clickstreams:

  • clickstream-enwiki-2024-02.tsv:Boyle Boyle_(surname) link 65 (~15.6%)
  • clickstream-enwiki-2024-02.tsv:Boyle Boyle's_law link 29 (~7%)
  • clickstream-enwiki-2024-02.tsv:Boyle Boyle,_County_Roscommon link 15 (~3.6%)
  • clickstream-enwiki-2024-02.tsv:Boyle Robert_Boyle other 12
  • clickstream-enwiki-2024-02.tsv:Boyle Clan_Boyle link 11

So, we see a spike in traffic to Boyle's law (last time it was seen in clickstreams was November - 12 "other"), which is probably good. The couple more clickstreams to the Irish town aren't so pronounced (likewise last time in November it was 11 also via "link"). Everything else is still about people, and we clearly introduced an extra click, and having to type in Robert's name in the search box ("other"). Let's see what happens next month. So far it does sound like a fair bit of a regression. --Joy (talk) 13:39, 6 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

These results raise a wider question. If no person is a primary topic, the surname itself is of little interest but the total views for people listed on the surname page outnumber the total for other topics, does that entitle the surname to the base name? My instinct is "no", but we might want to discuss the matter in a more general forum. Certes (talk) 14:47, 6 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The problem is the one we discussed in that RFC that died out - we compartmentalize navigation too much, which leads to these kinds of questions. Don't get me wrong, the question is completely logical in our current little cinematic universe :) but we shouldn't be forced to think of navigation like this. --Joy (talk) 15:41, 6 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

In March, there were 391 incoming views[2], and

clickstream-enwiki-2024-03.tsv:
  • Boyle Boyle_(surname) link 129 (~33% / ~64%)
  • Boyle Boyle's_law link 35 (~9% / ~17%)
  • Boyle Arthur_Conan_Doyle other 22 (~6% / ~11%)
  • Boyle Boyle,_County_Roscommon link 16 (~4% / ~8%)
  • total: 202

There was one more view to the Irish town, yet it was both close to the anonymization threshold, and behind the seemingly random traffic towards to a famous Doyle, which is another Irish name. --Joy (talk) 14:24, 6 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

It will be interesting to see the clickstream data for Boyle (surname) when available. I suspect that most readers who reached that page, either via dab Boyle or otherwise, were looking for a particular person called Boyle rather than the surname itself. The January data for Boyle in WikiNav's Comparison Over Time → Outgoing Pageviews suggests that Robert Boyle may be popular enough to be worth listing more prominently with a direct link in Boyle. Certes (talk) 20:30, 6 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]