User:Daniel Mietchen/Talks/Wikipedia for Health/Safety Research and Data 2015
About
[edit]This page belongs to a talk given as part of the Wikipedia for Health/Safety Research and Data (WHSRD) in Washington, DC.
Title
[edit]Wikimedia and scholarly communication
Abstract
[edit]There are multiple ways in which Wikimedia platforms interact with scholarly communications. This talk will zoom in to the interface of the two, both on a technical and a community level. It will highlight how content finds its way from scholarly communications into Wikimedia projects and sometimes vice versa, how data, metadata, software, infrastructure and the workflows of people and bots fit into the picture.
A video recording of a similar talk given at CERN some years back is available via https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/CERN_2012 .
Formats
[edit]Wikimedia
[edit]Publishing
[edit]Wikimedia about publishing
[edit]- Publishing
- Academic journal
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Academic Journals
- Wikisource:WikiProject Academic Papers
- Wikimedia Commons Category:Open access (publishing)
- Wikidata:WikiProject Source MetaData
- Wikidata:WikiProject Wikidata for research
- Wikidata:WikiProject Periodicals
- Wikidata:WikiProject Books
- Wiki Loves Libraries
- Wikimedians in Residence
Wikimedia and Open Access
[edit]- Overview
- Wikipedia article: Open access
- Exists in multiple languages
- Associated Wikidata item
- Multiple Wikimedia entities have signed the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Open Access
- Open-access policy
- Blog post announcing the policy
- Signpost article about the policy
- highlights differences to typical Open-access policies:
- It covers not just publications, but associated data, software and multimedia;
- It stresses the importance of open licensing, which facilitates and broadens the scope of reuse;
- It is itself available under an open license, so it can easily be adapted (e.g. translated);
- It avoids embargo periods (which most other policies allow for), and instead allows for limited exceptions;
- The exceptions are to be documented in public, which helps to collect data on the necessity for exceptions and can inform later refinements of the policy.
- highlights differences to typical Open-access policies:
- The actual policy
- FAQ on the policy
- Licensing is key throughout
Wikimedia and subscription access
[edit]Publishing about Wikimedia
[edit]Wikimedia about publications about Wikimedia
[edit]Journal ↔ wiki publishing
[edit]Bliven, S.; Prlić, A. (2012). Wodak, Shoshana (ed.). "Circular Permutation in Proteins". PLoS Computational Biology. 8 (3): e1002445. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002445. PMC 3320104. PMID 22496628.{{cite journal}} : CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link), CC BY
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Wikipedia: Circular permutation in proteins, CC BY-SA | A journal article whose text corresponds to this version of the Wikipedia article Dengue fever, CC BY-SA. Extension of this scheme through peer review by BMJ — see unconference session by Anthony Cole.
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Overview | Commentary |
- Wikiversity Journal of Medicine
- Open Access to a High-Quality, Impartial, Point-of-Care Medical Summary Would Save Lives: Why Does It Not Exist?
- RIO Journal
Publishing beyond papers
[edit]- Completely natural on Wikimedia platforms
- e.g. WMF Grants and grant schemes by various chapters
- example project: Open Access Media Importer
- Completely unnatural for academics
- New journal to cover research from all steps of the research cycle
- RIO Journal
Citing
[edit]Citing journals in wiki
[edit]- WP:V — verifiability
- Wikipedia Cite-o-Meter
- Journals cited by Wikipedia
- Halfaker, Aaron; Taraborelli, Dario (2015): Scholarly article citations in Wikipedia. figshare. Retrieved 14:22, Feb 27, 2015 (GMT)
- CrossRef DOI Events for Wikimedia
- CrossRef Labs DOI Chronograph
Citing wiki in journals
[edit]Reusing
[edit]Reusing journal materials in wiki
[edit]Open Access Media Importer
[edit]An example of open science - from the grant proposal to all outputs.
- commons:User:Open Access Media Importer Bot (OAMI)
- imports audio and video files from openly licensed articles in PubMed Central (PMC)
- Stats:
- Expansion to full-text import
- deeplinking
- Wikipedia Zero
- Wikisource is included
Reusing wiki materials in journal
[edit]- "image from Wikipedia"
- "image from Wikimedia" (Commons)
- "image source: Wikipedia"
- "image source: Wikimedia" (Commons)
- Springer's misappropriation of Wikimedia content "the tip of the iceberg"
Translations
[edit]Curating via Wikimedia
[edit]Role of repositories
[edit]- Interoperability
- is key to reuse
- requires standardization
- JATS is the de-facto standard for exchanging journal article content in a machine-readable fashion
- used for articles ingested into PubMed Central
- SciELO content is available in JATS, soon in PMC
- Optical Society of America, Copernicus, BioMed Central, Nature Publishing Group and others moved to JATS, even though not all of their content is going to PMC
- NASA and other US Federal Agencies are planning to build their public access policies around PMC
- Problem: Inconsistent XML as a Barrier to Reuse of Open Access Content
- JATS4R is trying to address this
- Improving the reusability of JATS
- Now also with data citation
Visualizations
[edit]- Listen to Wikipedia
- Wikipulse
- Map of recent edits
- Wikistream
- Wikimedia project growth animation
- Wikipedia live monitor
- Manypedia
- SuggestBot
- Twikipedia
- Wikidata lists
- Web Observatory
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Long-term vision
[edit]Wikidata for research
[edit]- Listen to Wikidata
- Wikidata presentations from WikiCon USA
- Items
- Properties
- WikiProjects
- Bots
- Tools
- Reasonator
- Wikidata lists
- Property suggestor
- Wikidata game
- Templates
- WikiProjects
- Signalling OA-ness
- Wikidata:Data access