Niels Windfeld Lund wrote:
sometimes it is good to be a member of more than one discussion list !
I'm not sure, if that remark was meant in a sarcastic way? Yes, I also received this link in multiple groups multiple times, but that's at least signifies that there is some interest in the topic. Personally, I have become very interested, because to me Wikipedia is a nuisance, as its various reincarnations clutter the search engines and because too many people actually do use it as a credible source (and it's ususually not even properly cited). Anyways, I would like to post my standard reply to this link: The comparision is problematic in two ways: 1) Only natural science entries were tested. This seems to me the least problematic area of Wikipedia. Paradigmatic sciences, as are the natural sciences, prduces "facts"; that is, there rarely is any doubt about the appropriateness of the currently dominant theories. Regardless of ideology and political positions, chances are, that most people agree on the adequacy of Einstein's special theory of relativity and that it is a uniquely defined theory, even if most people may have only a faint idea what this theory is about. Such neat consensus does not exist in the huimanities and social sciences, so Wikipedia entries from these domains are often much less reliable. 2) The sampling process of the Nature article is so flawed, it renders the test results meaningless. The article says little about how the entries were chosen by the editorial team of Nature, but what it does say is in my view unacceptable practice: "All entries were chosen to be approximately the same length in both encyclopaedias." Now, surely, the length of an indicator is one valid goodness criterion. Encyclopedia articles should be concise, but at the same time cover all significant aspects of a phenomenon. By limiting the review to Wikipedia articles that approximate EB articles in length, the reviewers very much cherry picked the Wikipedia entries, as we know that EB articles are on the average probably quite good. From my own experience, I found Wikipedia articles in my field of expertise (sociology) usually quite sloppy. Not really bad, but usually worse than a Google search for "$concept site:edu" and often tilted towards one or another political standpoint or one or another sociological theory. Thus: My skepticism of Wikipedia is not affected by the findings of the nature article. Thomas -- thomas koenig http://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/mmethods/staff/thomas/index.html