Published on in Vol 20, No 5 (2018): May

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/9683, first published .
Effects of Contributor Experience on the Quality of Health-Related Wikipedia Articles

Effects of Contributor Experience on the Quality of Health-Related Wikipedia Articles

Effects of Contributor Experience on the Quality of Health-Related Wikipedia Articles

Authors of this article:

Peter Holtz1 Author Orcid Image ;   Besnik Fetahu2 Author Orcid Image ;   Joachim Kimmerle1 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Joorabchi A, Doherty C, Dawson J. ‘WP2Cochrane’, a tool linking Wikipedia to the Cochrane Library: Results of a bibliometric analysis evaluating article quality and importance. Health Informatics Journal 2020;26(3):1881 View
  2. Jemielniak D, Masukume G, Wilamowski M. The Most Influential Medical Journals According to Wikipedia: Quantitative Analysis. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2019;21(1):e11429 View
  3. Bientzle M, Hircin E, Kimmerle J, Knipfer C, Smeets R, Gaudin R, Holtz P. Association of Online Learning Behavior and Learning Outcomes for Medical Students: Large-Scale Usage Data Analysis. JMIR Medical Education 2019;5(2):e13529 View
  4. Holtz P, Kimmerle J, Cress U. Using big data techniques for measuring productive friction in mass collaboration online environments. International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning 2018;13(4):439 View
  5. Smith D, Triberti S. Situating Wikipedia as a health information resource in various contexts: A scoping review. PLOS ONE 2020;15(2):e0228786 View
  6. Seckin G, Hughes S. Patient-Reported Outcomes in a Nationally Representative Sample of Older Internet Users: Cross-sectional Survey. JMIR Aging 2021;4(4):e16006 View
  7. Smailhodzic E, Boonstra A, Langley D. Social media enabled interactions in healthcare: Towards a taxonomy. Social Science & Medicine 2021;291:114469 View