Wikipedia's information on global warming is unreliable: study

Researchers have analysed Wikipedia's edit history

Update: 2015-08-16 14:36 GMT
Researchers analysed the Wikipedia edit history

Wikipedia entries on politically controversial scientific topics such as global warming can be unreliable due to information sabotage, a new study has claimed. Researchers analysed Wikipedia edit histories for three  politically controversial scientific topics (acid rain, evolution, and global warming), and four non-controversial scientific topics (the standard model in physics, heliocentrism, general relativity, and continental drift).   "Wikipedia's acid rain entry receives near-daily edits,some of which result in egregious errors and a distortion of  consensus science," said Dr Gene E Likens, President Emeritus of the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and a Distinguished  Research Professor at the University of Connecticut. In an effort to see how Wikipedia's acid rain entry compared to other scientific topics, Likens partnered with Dr Adam M Wilson, a geographer at the University of Buffalo.    

Using nearly a decade of data, Likens and Wilson teased out daily edit rates, the mean size of edits (words added, deleted, or edited), and the mean number of page views per day. While the edit rate of the acid rain article was less     than the edit rate of the evolution and global warming articles, it was significantly higher than the     non-controversial topics, researchers said.  Across the board, politically controversial scientific   topics were edited more heavily and viewed more often. "Wikipedia's global warming entry sees 2-3 edits a day, with more than 100 words altered, while the standard model in physics has around 10 words changed every few weeks," Wilson noted.    

"The high rate of change observed in politically controversial scientific topics makes it difficult for experts  to monitor their accuracy and contribute time-consuming corrections," he said.   "As society turns to Wikipedia for answers, students, educators, and citizens should understand its limitations when  researching scientific topics that are politically charged. "On entries subject to edit-wars, like acid rain, evolution, and global change, one can obtain - within seconds - diametrically different information on the same topic," said Likens.   

Researchers note that as Wikipedia matures, there is  evidence that the breadth of its scientific content is increasingly based on source material from established scientific journals. They also note that Wikipedia employs algorithms to help identify and correct blatantly malicious edits, such as profanity.  But in their view, it remains to be seen how Wikipedia  will manage the dynamic, changing content that typifies politically-charged science topics. The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.     

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