User talk:Schvan
Your submission at Roger W. Schvaneveldt (March 5)
Please read the comments left by the reviewer on your submission. You are encouraged to edit the submission to address the issues raised and resubmit when they have been resolved.
- If you would like to continue working on the submission, you can find it at Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Roger W. Schvaneveldt.
- To edit the submission, click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
- If you need any assistance, you can ask for help at the Articles for creation help desk, or on the .
contributions to Wikipedia!
- Please remember to linkto the submission!
- Please remember to
- You can also get real-time chat help from experienced editors.
- Hold on Dr. Schvaneveldt; perhaps Yngvadottir can be of assistance with this AfC, given their knowledge and their infinite patience. Drmies (talk) 01:24, 7 March 2014 (UTC)
- Hi: Thanks for reminding me of this with an e-mail! I looked, but I am afraid Drmies has overestimated my knowledge of psychology by a country mile. Here is a question I hope you won't find insulting: have you looked at the general notability guideline, since academics are relatively rarely the subject of multiple articles in newspapers and magazines. Can you identify one or more of those criteria that you believe you meet? For example, can you show that your work has been influential in the field, or do you hold a named chair? As you see from the page, any of those would do it. Or can you point to press coverage specifically about you (or a Festschrift?) Yngvadottir (talk) 19:15, 8 March 2014 (UTC)]
- Letting you know that I got your e-mail and will be consulting with editors who know their way around impact factors, because I tend to agree that that looks adequate. I'll also have a rummage on JSTOR when I can. Yngvadottir (talk) 12:24, 9 March 2014 (UTC)
- Hi: Thanks for reminding me of this with an e-mail! I looked, but I am afraid Drmies has overestimated my knowledge of psychology by a country mile. Here is a question I hope you won't find insulting: have you looked at
papers
Hello Roger, please
- Your analysis is spot on. I might mention that Dave Meyer and I independently discovered semantic primingwhich led to our collaborative work.
- Here is an excerpt from Dave's biography [[1]] which attests to this:
- Thus, his research moved quickly to further territories of semantic memory, where he established an experimental paradigm involving the lexical-decision task, a procedure that requires participants to judge whether various strings of letters are real words. Here the results revealed that lexical-decision RTs are significantly shorter for words (e.g., "butter") immediately preceded by other associated words (e.g., "bread"). The discovery of such priming opened new windows through which the structure and processing of semantic information can be examined in detail. Concurrently, Roger Schvaneveldt at SUNY Stony Brook also discovered semantic priming in lexical decisions. When he shared notes with Meyer at the 1970 Psychonomic Society meeting, they agreed to co-author an article in the Journal of Experimental Psychology (Meyer & Schvaneveldt, 1971), which strongly influenced subsequent studies of visual word recognition and related cognitive processes. Their collaboration flourished over several years, producing more articles on semantic priming, orthographic and phonemic coding, dual-route retrieval models, and other aspects of word recognition.
- I added the link to semantic priming, and some other already-in-wikipedia mentions, at the bottom. 74.192.84.101 (talk) 19:11, 9 March 2014 (UTC)
- Thus, his research moved quickly to further territories of semantic memory, where he established an experimental paradigm involving the lexical-decision task, a procedure that requires participants to judge whether various strings of letters are real words. Here the results revealed that lexical-decision RTs are significantly shorter for words (e.g., "butter") immediately preceded by other associated words (e.g., "bread"). The discovery of such priming opened new windows through which the structure and processing of semantic information can be examined in detail. Concurrently, Roger Schvaneveldt at SUNY Stony Brook also discovered semantic priming in lexical decisions. When he shared notes with Meyer at the 1970 Psychonomic Society meeting, they agreed to co-author an article in the Journal of Experimental Psychology (Meyer & Schvaneveldt, 1971), which strongly influenced subsequent studies of visual word recognition and related cognitive processes. Their collaboration flourished over several years, producing more articles on semantic priming, orthographic and phonemic coding, dual-route retrieval models, and other aspects of word recognition.
In the following list, (PR) means peer reviewed, and (IC) means invited chapter. ((—Roger))
- (with meyer) David E. Meyer
- 1 (PR) Facilitation in recognizing pairs of words: evidence of a dependence between retrieval operations. In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. DE Meyer, RW Schvaneveldt - Journal of experimental psychology, 1971 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 2074 Related articles All 10 versions Cite Save. #0 at academic.microsoft.com == David E. Meyer is only author listed (the nerve! well... more likely, the database bug! :-) in the Journal of Experimental Psychology , vol. 90, no. 2, pp. 227-234, 1971
- 3 (IC) [CITATION] Loci of contextual effects on visual word recognition In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. DE Meyer, RW Schvaneveldt, MG Ruddy - Attention and performance V, 1975 Cited by 553 Related articles Cite Save. #3 at academic.microsoft.com == Loci of contextual effects on visual word-recognition (Citations: 168) D. Meyer, R. Schvaneveldt, M. Ruddy Published in 1975.
- 5 (PR) Functions of graphemic and phonemic codes in visual word-recognition DE Meyer, RW Schvaneveldt, MG Ruddy - Memory & Cognition, 1974 - Springer Cited by 402 Related articles All 12 versions Cite Save. #4 at academic.microsoft.com == Functions of graphemic and phonemic codes in visual word recognition (Citations: 104) D. E. Meyer, R. W. Schvaneveldt, M. G. Ruddy Published in 1974.
- 6 (PR) [PDF] Meaning, memory structure, and mental processes In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. DE Meyer, RW Schvaneveldt - Science, 1976 - interlinkinc.net Cited by 283 Related articles All 10 versions Cite Save. #8_and_#40 at academic.microsoft.com == Meaning, memory structure, and mental processes (Citations: 80_or_2) D. Meyer, R. Schvaneveldt Journal: Science , vol. 192, no. 4234, pp. 27-33, 1976
- (4),(PR) 10 Lexical ambiguity, semantic context, and visual word recognition. RW Schvaneveldt, DE Meyer… - Journal of Experimental …, 1976 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 190 Related articles All 10 versions Cite Save. #5_and_#17 at academic.microsoft.com == Lexical ambiguity, semantic context, and visual word recognition (Citations: 93_plus_34_more) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, David E. Meyer, Curtis A. Becker Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-human Perception and Performance - J EXP PSYCHOL-HUM PERCEP PERF , vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 243-256, 1976
- (5),(IC) 11 [CITATION] Retrieval and comparison processes in semantic memory In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. RW Schvaneveldt, DE Meyer - … and performance IV, 1973 - Academic Press New York Cited by 163 Related articles Cite Save. Not found at academic.microsoft.com.
- (with mcdonald) James E. McDonald(nope...physicist) or James McDonald(not in list) maybe? see also Kenneth R. Paap or Kenneth Paap.
- James E. Mcdonald was my graduate student. He is not in the list of James McDonalds in wikipedia. ((—Roger))
- 4 (PR) An activation–verification model for letter and word recognition: The word-superiority effect. Paap, Kenneth R.; Newsome, Sandra L.; McDonald, James E.; Schvaneveldt, Roger W. - Psychological …, 1982 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 504 Related articles All 10 versions Cite Save. #2 at academic.microsoft.com == An activation–verification model for letter and word recognition: The word-superiority effect (Citations: 241) Kenneth R. Paap, Sandra L. Newsome, James E. McDonald, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: Psychological Review - PSYCHOL REV , vol. 89, no. 5, pp. 573-594, 1982
- (7)(PR) , 18 Semantic context and the encoding of words: Evidence for two modes of stimulus analysis. RW Schvaneveldt, JE McDonald - Journal of Experimental …, 1981 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 94 Related articles All 7 versions Cite Save. #10_and_#37 at academic.microsoft.com == Semantic context and the encoding of words: Evidence for two modes of stimulus analysis (Citations: 56_or_3) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, James E. McDonald Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-human Perception and Performance - J EXP PSYCHOL-HUM PERCEP PERF , vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 673-687, 1981
- 12 Frequency and pronounceability in visually presented naming and lexical decision tasks. KR Paap, JE McDonald, RW Schvaneveldt, RW Noel - 1987 - doi.apa.org Cited by 139 Related articles All 4 versions Cite Save. #13 at academic.microsoft.com == Frequency and pronounceability in visually presented naming and lexical-decision tasks (Citations: 45) K. R. Paap, J. E. Mcdonald, R. W. Schvaneveldt, R. W. Noel Published in 1987.
- 25 A formal interface design methodology based on user knowledge JE McDonald, DW Dearholt, KR Paap, RW Schvaneveldt - ACM SIGCHI …, 1986 - dl.acm.org Cited by 48 Related articles All 2 versions Cite Save. #26 at academic.microsoft.com == A formal interface design methodology based on user knowledge (Citations: 7) James E. McDonald, Donald W. Dearholt, Kenneth R. Paap, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: ACM Sigchi Bulletin , vol. 17, no. 4, pp. 285-290, 1986
- 21 (IC) The application of user knowledge to interface design JE McDonald, RW Schvaneveldt - Cognitive science and its …, 1988 - books.google.com Cited by 74 Related articles All 2 versions Cite Save More. #20 at academic.microsoft.com == The application of user knowledge to interface design (Citations: 22) J. E. Mcdonald, R. W. Schvaneveldt Published in 1988.
- __, __, Using Pathfinder to extract semantic information from text. JE McDonald, TA Plate, RW Schvaneveldt - 1990 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 29 Related articles All 2 versions Cite Save. #23.5 at academic.microsoft.com == Using pathfinder to extract semantic information from text (Citations: 12). J. E. Mcdonald, T. A. Plate. Published in 1990.
- as first author.
- I edited the "Pathfinder" book and was an author or coauthor of several chapters. I was the lead developer of the Pathfinder network Scaling method. It's citation rate shows the extent to which the method has been used in many studies. ((— Roger))
- (1), 2 [BOOK] Pathfinder associative networks: Studies in knowledge organization. In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. RW Schvaneveldt - 1990 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 834 Related articles All 5 versions Cite Save More. #1 at academic.microsoft.com == Pathfinder associative networks: studies in knowledge organization (Citations: 262) Roger Schvaneveldt Published in 1990.
- (2), (IC) 7 Network structures in proximity data In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. RW Schvaneveldt, FT Durso… - The psychology of …, 1989 - books.google.com Cited by 240 Related articles All 7 versions Cite Save. #9_and_#35 at academic.microsoft.com == Network Structures in Proximity Data (Citations: 75_or_3) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, F. T. Durso, D. W. Dearholt Journal: Psychology of Learning and Motivation - PSYCH LEARN MOTIV-ADV RES TH , vol. 24, pp. 249-284, 1989. (or 1980? prolly typo)
- (3), (PR) 8 Measuring the structure of expertise In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. RW Schvaneveldt, FT Durso, TE Goldsmith… - International journal of …, 1985 - Elsevier Cited by 240 Related articles All 8 versions Cite Save More. #6 at academic.microsoft.com == Measuring the Structure of Expertise (Citations: 81) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, Francis T. Durso, Timothy E. Goldsmith, Timothy J. Breen, Nancy M. Cooke, Richard G. Tucker, Joseph C. De Maio Journal: International Journal of Human-computer Studies / International Journal of Man-machine Studies - IJMMS , vol. 23, no. 6, pp. 699-728, 1985
- (6), (PR) 16 Attention and probabilistic sequence learning RW Schvaneveldt, RL Gomez - Psychological Research, 1998 - Springer Cited by 102 Related articles All 15 versions Cite Save. #12 at academic.microsoft.com == Attention and probabilistic sequence learning (Citations: 49) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, Rebecca L. Gomez. Journal: Psychological Research-psychologische Forschung - PSYCHOL RES-PSYCHOL FORSCH , vol. 61, no. 3, pp. 175-190, 1998
- (8), (PR) 19 The effect of semantic context on children's word recognition R Schvaneveldt, BP Ackerman, T Semlear - Child Development, 1977 - JSTOR Cited by 91 Related articles All 3 versions Cite Save. #18 at academic.microsoft.com == The Effect of Semantic Context on Children's Word Recognition (Citations: 29) Roger Schvaneveldt, Brian P. Ackerman, Teddy Semlear Journal: Child Development - CHILD DEVELOP , vol. 48, no. 2, 1977
- (9), (PR) 22 [HTML] Graph theoretic foundations of pathfinder networks RW Schvaneveldt, DW Dearholt, FT Durso - Computers & mathematics with …, 1988 - Elsevier Cited by 69 Related articles All 7 versions Cite Save. #21 at academic.microsoft.com == Graph theoretic foundations of pathfinder networks (Citations: 21) R Schvaneveldt Journal: Computers & Mathematics With Applications - COMPUT MATH APPL , vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 337-345, 1988
- (10), 23 [CITATION] PATHFINDER, Scaling with Network Structures RW Schvaneveldt, FT Durso, DW Dearholt - 1985 - Computing Research Laboratory, … Cited by 58 Related articles Cite Save More. #22 at academic.microsoft.com == Pathfinder: scaling with network structures (Citations: 16) R. W. Schvaneveldt, D. W. Dearholt Published in 1985.
- (11), (PR) 26 Sequential effects in choice reaction time. RW Schvaneveldt, WG Chase - Journal of Experimental …, 1969 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 45 Related articles All 3 versions Cite Save. #15.5 at academic.microsoft.com == Sequential effects in choice reaction time (Citations: 38) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, William G. Chase Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology , vol. 80, no. 1, pp. 1-8, 1969
- (12), (PR) 28 Effects of complexity in simultaneous reaction time tasks. RW Schvaneveldt - Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1969 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 36 Related articles All 3 versions Cite Save. #23.7 at academic.microsoft.com == Effects of complexity in simultaneous reaction time tasks (Citations: 12). Roger W. Schvaneveldt. Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology , vol. 81, no. 2, pp. 289-296, 1969
- (13), (PR) 29 Priority and organization of information accessed by pilots in various phases of flight RW Schvaneveldt, DB Beringer… - … International Journal of …, 2001 - Taylor & Francis Cited by 34 Related articles All 5 versions Cite Save. #27 at academic.microsoft.com == Priority and organization of information accessed by pilots in various phases of flight (Citations: 6). Roger Schvaneveldt, Dennis Beringer, John Lamonica. Journal: International Journal of Aviation Psychology - INT J AVIAT PSYCHOL , vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 253-280, 2001
- (14), (PR) 30 Semantic distance effects in categorization tasks. RW Schvaneveldt, FT Durso… - Journal of Experimental …, 1982 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 34 Related articles All 3 versions Cite Save. #24 at academic.microsoft.com == Semantic distance effects in categorization tasks (Citations: 9) Roger W. Schvaneveldt, Francis T. Durso, Basabi R. Mukherji Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-learning Memory and Cognition - J EXP PSYCHOL-LEARN MEM COGN , vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 1-15, 1982
- (15), 31 [CITATION] Generalized semantic networks RW Schvaneveldt, FT Durso - BULLETIN OF …, 1981 - PSYCHONOMIC SOC INC 1710 … Cited by 34 Related articles Cite Save. Not found at academic.microsoft.com.
- (16),(PR) xx Modeling mental workload RW Schvaneveldt, GB Reid, RL Gomez, S Rice - 1997 - DTIC Document Cited by 24 Related articles All 6 versions Cite Save More. #28 at academic.microsoft.com == Modeling Mental Workload (Citations: 6) Roger W. Schvaneveldt
- others, not sorted specifically yet
- 9 (PR) Semantic-context effects on word recognition: Influence of varying the proportion of items presented in an appropriate context JR Tweedy, RH Lapinski, RW Schvaneveldt - Memory & Cognition, 1977 - Springer Cited by 204 Related articles All 6 versions Cite Save. #7 at academic.microsoft.com == Semantic-context effects on word recognition: Influence of varying the proportion of items presented in an appropriate context (Citations: 81) J. R. Tweedy, R. H. Lapinski, R. W. Schvaneveldt Published in 1977.
- 13 (PR) Recall and measures of memory organization. …, FT Durso, RW Schvaneveldt - Journal of Experimental …, 1986 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 133 Related articles All 7 versions Cite Save. #14_and_#34 at academic.microsoft.com == Recall and measures of memory organization (Citations: 41_or_4) Nancy M. Cooke, Francis T. Durso, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-learning Memory and Cognition - J EXP PSYCHOL-LEARN MEM COGN , vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 538-549, 1986
- 14 (PR) What is learned from artificial grammars? Transfer tests of simple association. RL Gomez, RW Schvaneveldt - Journal of Experimental Psychology …, 1994 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 127 Related articles All 8 versions Cite Save. #11 at academic.microsoft.com == (Citations: 50) Rebecca L. Gomez, Roger W. Schvaneveldt. Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-learning Memory and Cognition, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 396-410, 1994
- 15 Properties of Pathfinder networks. DW Dearholt, RW Schvaneveldt - 1990 - psycnet.apa.org Cited by 124 Related articles All 2 versions Cite Save
- 17 (PR) Effects of computer programming experience on network representations of abstract programming concepts NJ Cooke, RW Schvaneveldt - International Journal of Man-Machine …, 1988 - Elsevier Cited by 94 Related articles All 9 versions Cite Save. #19_and_#36 at academic.microsoft.com == Effects of Computer Programming Experience on Network Representations of Abstract Programming Concepts (Citations: 27_or_3) Nancy J. Cooke, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: International Journal of Human-computer Studies / International Journal of Man-machine Studies - IJMMS , vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 407-427, 1988 (or 1987?)
- 20 (PR) The basis of transfer in artificial grammar learning RL Gomez, L Gerken, RW Schvaneveldt - Memory & Cognition, 2000 - Springer Cited by 78 Related articles All 8 versions Cite Save. #15 at academic.microsoft.com == The basis of transfer in artificial grammar learning (Citations: 38). Rebecca L. Gomez, Louann Gerken, Roger W. Schvaneveldt. Journal: Memory & Cognition - MEM COGNITION , vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 253-263, 2000
- 24 (PR) [HTML] Reflective Random Indexing and indirect inference: A scalable method for discovery of implicit connections In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. T Cohen, R Schvaneveldt, D Widdows - Journal of Biomedical Informatics, 2010 - Elsevier Cited by 58 Related articles All 8 versions Cite Save. #29 at academic.microsoft.com == Reflective Random Indexing and indirect inference: A scalable method for discovery of implicit connections (Citations: 5). Trevor Cohen, Roger W. Schvaneveldt, Dominic Widdows. Journal: Journal of Biomedical Informatics - JBI , vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 240-256, 2010
- 27 (PR) Testing morphological productivity M Aronoff, R Schvaneveldt - Annals of the New York Academy …, 1978 - Wiley Online Library Cited by 40 Related articles All 3 versions Cite Save More. #30 at academic.microsoft.com == Testing Morphological Productivity (Citations: 5) Mark Aronoff, Roger Schvaneveldt Journal: Annals of The New York Academy of Sciences - ANN N Y ACAD SCI , vol. 318, no. 1 Papers i, pp. 106-114, 1978
- also listed at msft
- Cited by 168 at google, but they only list the first two authors (Durso & Gronlund) for the 1999 edition. Maybe msft has another year, or maybe one or the other has a bug? #16 at academic.microsoft.com == Situation Awareness (Citations: 37) Francis T. Durso, Scott D. Gronlund, R. Nickerson, R. Schvaneveldt, S. Dumais, M. Chi, S. Lindsay.
- (PR) Cited by 24 at google. #23 at academic.microsoft.com == Programmer-nonprogrammer differences in specifying procedures to people and computers (Citations: 12) Lisa A. Onorato, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: Journal of Systems and Software - JSS , vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 357-369, 1987
- (PR) Cited by 15 at google. #25 at academic.microsoft.com == Assessing Beliefs about ’Environmental Illness/Multiple Chemical Sensitivity’ (Citations: 7). Rebecca L. Gomez, Roger W. Schvaneveldt, Herman Staudenmayer. Journal: Journal of Health Psychology - J HEALTH PSYCHOL , vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 107-123, 1996
- (PR) Cited by 23 at google. #31 at academic.microsoft.com == Is consistent mapping necessary for high-speed search? (Citations: 4) Francis T. Durso, Nancy M. Cooke, Timothy J. Breen, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology-learning Memory and Cognition - J EXP PSYCHOL-LEARN MEM COGN , vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 223-229, 1987
- (PR) Cited by 15 at google. #32 at academic.microsoft.com == Classification of empirically derived prototypes as a function of category experience (Citations: 4) Timothy J. Breen, Roger W. Schvaneveldt Journal: Memory & Cognition - MEM COGNITION , vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 313-320, 1986
- Cited by 14 at google. #33 at academic.microsoft.com == Pathfinder: Networks from Proximity Data (Citations: 4) R. W. Schvaneveldt, F. T Durso, D. W. Dearholt Published in 1987.
- other work, which has fewer cites of course, and thus might not yet belong in wikipedia, unless the cites/year metric is especially high.
- In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. Schvaneveldt, R.W.; Cohen, T.A. (2010), "Abductive reasoning and similarity: Some computational tools", in Ifenthaler, D.; Pirnay-Dummer, P.; Seel, N.M., Computer-based diagnostics and systematic analysis of knowledge, New York: Springer
- In the AfC draft as of 2014-03-09. Schvaneveldt, R.W.; Cohen, T.A.; Whitfield, G.K. (2013), "Paths to discovery", in Staszewski, J., Expertise and skill acquisition: The impact of William G. Chase, New York: Psychology Press
- other articles with mentions, besides David E. Meyer and Pathfinder network.
- Lexical decision task , see #(4), #10 from 1976, and also #12 from 1987.
- Word superiority effect , see #4 from 1982
- Random indexing , with Cohen 2009
- Lyn Yvonne Abramson , with Durso & Nickerson
- Anthony Marcel , with Meyer
- Priming_(psychology) , with Meyer
- Indirect tests of memory , with Meyer
- Implicit stereotype , with Meyer 1971 (Facilitation paper)
Hope this helps, and thanks for improving wikipedia Roger, it is appreciated. Sorry we are such a mess at the moment. ;-) You're welcome to stick around and help; if you know anything about organizational/industrial psych, there is a content-dispute you might be able to help me with, in fact.... But see
- Updated with microsoft's cite-counts. These are uniformly lower, because msft doesn't spy as well as WP:GOOG. Roger, were you a co-author of Situation Awareness (1999) with F.Durso + S.Gronlund? Microsoft says yea, Google says nay. 74.192.84.101 (talk) 03:02, 10 March 2014 (UTC)]
procedural stuff
So, as you are prolly figuring out, wikipedia is a bit of a bear, nowadays. We are having trouble with editor-count being too low (the ratio of active editors to active readers is out of whack — and has been for several years now). There are a lot of editors who don't think academic work is
That said, to a neutral observer, that has some grok of peer-review and editorial-review as being independent, you are waaaaay beyond achieving wikiNotability. As an aside, I learned the other day that the French wikipedia calls it "notoriety" ... now, I'm not sure, whether the French folks have the same connotations for that word which spring to mind when I hear it. In any case: please consider yourself wikiNotorious, in my book. ;-) That doesn't mean that our work here is done. The article as it stands is ready to be put into mainspace, methinks, though it could use some tweaks. It is not a great article; just a couple brief paragraphs of chronology, and then a list of papers. That is fine, though. Wikipedia is not supposed to be about achieving perfection the first time.
How is your level of gumption, at the moment? Are you in a hurry to get into mainspace? Or are you happy for the wheels of wikiJustice to grind slowly along? They do grind slow, but they tend to grind fair. There are ways of skipping over steps, although usually they involve getting caught in a different web of bureaucracy. Yngvadottir recommends that we let the AfC process wind along, which might take a couple days, but depending on load could take a couple weeks.
The main alternative is to leave the AfC queue, and go straight into mainspace; that will often result in the new article getting immediately "nominated for deletion" (not for any reason... more as a matter of discouraging the bypass of AfC... sigh). At the AfD page, there would be further discussion of h-index, cite count, whether the reviewers were really independent, and other such nitty-gritty stuff. Depending on who shows up for such discussions, and especially, on which administrator 'closes' the discussion at the end, there is a risk that even a wikiNotable topic can be temporarily deleted. Plenty of folks don't see notability, unless it has been on teevee, sadly enough. And although we have written policy, and tons of guidelines, the policy-backed arguments only win about 85% of the time. In other words, there is about a 15% chance that we would have to start back at the AfC queue again, if we try to take the shortcut. I expect that we'd get the article created, no matter which way is more appealing to you, the shortcut (which might turn into a "longcut" if our luck does not hold), or the usual way (which with luck might only take a couple more days). Thoughts on this? 74.192.84.101 (talk) 19:11, 9 March 2014 (UTC)
I/O Content Dispute
|
---|
content-dispute in industrial/organizational psychologyRumour has it you might be willing to peek at this difficulty, as an outsider of the subfield, but one with expertise in the overall field. Thanks much. Note, however, that I'm not Yngvadottir, I'm just 74. :-) Best way to communicate with me, is via talkpages. Mine is here: User_talk:74.192.84.101, click new section, and I will see the "orange bar of doom" whenever I'm reading and/or editing wikipedia. Note that I'm having computer-operating-system-changeover difficulties at the moment, so my attention may not be prompt. Before I explain what the content-dispute is about, I will note that this is prolly not a simple effort. In other words, it is not really a "quick question" sort of thing, that you can glance at, and then call it good. There are some other editors, one of whom is some kind of professor of psychology (not sure where or whom). The back-and-forth has ranged across a bunch of different articles, and has led to requests for help more than once. I noticed it on the talkpage of User_talk:Whatamidoing , when I was discussing something unrelated with her. Drmies, who is an English prof, also has had some unhappy editors show up at their talkpage, about this content-dispute.
Point being, I again point at WP:NOTCOMPULSORY . If you don't feel like helping mediate these folks into some kind of useful workable acceptable-to-all way of writing the articles under dispute, that is totally fine. If, on the other hand, you feel like doing a bit of work, but don't have a million hours to spare, then that is totally fine, also. Just dive in, do what you feel happy doing, and if it turns out to be too much work / hassle / whatever, just quit doing it, and do something more enjoyable to improve wikipedia. Make sense?
Over here is where I can point you; this is the place where I made some comments, on one particular article-pair, which embodies one particular facet of the overall dispute. I've not delved any deeper, than just that bit. (But I remembered the issue, in case I ran across somebody that might want to... named Roger, perhaps. :-)
WP:RS can also be tricksy to grok for everybody. Anyhoo, I don't expect you to memorize the WP:PG, if you're willing to help, in any capacity whatsoever, that will be appreciated. I can try and explain the policies, if that is the root cause of the trouble. You can help translate the I/O psych jargon, when I flounder. Here are the articles[2] that seem to be where the dispute(s) have been happening:
This is a reasonably hot potato. Prior to six months ago, I would have called this a VERY hot potato, but since then I've learned about islands in Asia with political battlegrounds, and professors that write books about telepathy. (Those are warzones, as opposed to hot potatoes.) Anyhoo, since you kindly offered to consider helping out here, I give you the full deal. People that get into the group need to 1) stay banhammer on one or more of the parties from one or more of the factions.
Thanks for considering this important work; no hard feelings whatsoever if you would rather pass on this one. Plenty of other places on wikipedia that need work, after all. 74.192.84.101 (talk) 20:10, 9 March 2014 (UTC) |
Your submission at AfC Roger W. Schvaneveldt was accepted
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/21/AFC-Logo.svg/50px-AFC-Logo.svg.png)
You are more than welcome to continue making quality contributions to
- If you have any questions, you are welcome to ask at the help desk.
- If you would like to help us improve this process, please consider .
Thank you for helping improve Wikipedia!
Drmies (talk) 21:10, 9 March 2014 (UTC)- Congratulations, Roger. :-) — 74.192.84.101 (talk) 00:00, 10 March 2014 (UTC)
- Hi, just a fast note adding my congratulations - and thank you for the article! I'm sorry it's all so confusing; I am indeed a different person from 74, and I'm glad you don't mind my having finally just wrestled the article into a form where it would be more rapidly accepted. Yngvadottir (talk) 05:21, 10 March 2014 (UTC)
Good Advice
|
---|
74's belated advice on |
Managing a conflict of interest
- avoid editing or creating articles about yourself, your family, friends, colleagues, company, organization, clients, or competitors;
- propose changes on the talk pages of affected articles (you can use the {{edit COI}} template);
- disclose your conflict of interest when discussing affected articles (see Wikipedia:Conflict of interest § How to disclose a COI);
- avoid linking to your organization's website in other articles (see Wikipedia:Spam § External link spamming);
- do your best to comply with Wikipedia's content policies.
In addition, you are required by the Wikimedia Foundation's terms of use to disclose your employer, client, and affiliation with respect to any contribution which forms all or part of work for which you receive, or expect to receive, compensation. See Wikipedia:Paid-contribution disclosure.
Also, editing for the purpose of advertising, publicising, or promoting anyone or anything is not permitted. Thank you.