Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2019-01-31/Op-ed

Op-ed

Random Rewards Rejected

Lab rats revolt: Researchers don't get their way with the Wikipedia community

A proposed research project which would have randomly awarded barnstars to Wikipedia editors was recently withdrawn by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU). Bending to concerns expressed by en.Wikipedians that the process was a social experiment, Ph.D. student Diyi Yang and Robert E. Kraut, Ph.D, Herbert A. Simon Professor of Human-Computer Interaction at Language Technologies Institute, CMU, withdrew their proposal. Initially approved by the institutional review board (IRB) at CMU, the proposed research entitled How role-specific rewards influence Wikipedia editors' contribution would have involved placing thousands of randomly assigned barnstars on unsuspecting editors' user pages in order to monitor their reactions.

Yang's research is supported by a Facebook Fellowship. Facebook's own research has been criticized in an article in The Guardian by Sam Levin on 1 May 2017 over research in which it sought to alter the emotions of users without their consent, and again by George Monbiot in his opinion piece in the same newspaper on 31 December 2018, stating that "universities are leading us into temptation, when they should be enlightening us". The CMU proposal came under fire at Meta from several leading Wikipedians including BrownHairedGirl, Deryck Chan, Risker, SlimVirgin, and WereSpielChequers when the discussion at Meta spilled over to the Wikipedia Village Pump in a long and heated thread.

Words used by Wikipedia editors to describe the project included:

Aaron Halfaker Photo: Myleen Hollero

In a 455-page paper partly funded by Google, Who Did What: Editor Role Identification in Wikipedia, delivered at the Tenth International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM 2016), Aaron Halfaker (currently WMF Principal Research Scientist) in his capacity as WMF staff collaborated with CMU researchers Diyi Yang, Robert Kraut, and Eduard Hovy. From the abstract: "Understanding the social roles played by contributors to on-line communities can facilitate the process of task routing. In this work, we develop new techniques to find roles in Wikipedia based on editors' low-level edit types and investigate how work contributed by people from different roles affect the article quality."

Winding the clock back...

Seven years ago in April at ANI an attempt by Boing! said Zebedee to retain the dignity attached to the barnstar philosophy, by restricting its rampant willy-nilly use by IP users, a discussion on 'IP handing out random barnstars' was closed with: "Barnstar campaign and other forms of appreciation are not, other than exceptional cases, problematic or disruptive or actionable. This was not the droid you were looking for."

In April 2012 almost exactly 12 months later Softlavender filed a further ANI report on IP Barnstar spaming: 'I'm all for barnstars, but their value and purpose is diluted (could even say desecrated) when meaninglessly sprayed shotgun by a constantly changing and anonymous IP range for no good reason.'

The case was closed with: 'While some find random (and inappropriate) acts of Love annoying, no consensus exists for mass action at ANI and cases can be handled one at a time. Changing policy on barnstars is clearly outside of the scope of ANI...'

The phantom barnstar bomber

The wild Barnstarist turns out in both cases to be none other than Mike Restivo editing while logged out in the pursuit of an early research agenda covered in The Signpost column 'Recent Research' from the issue of 30 April 2012. His works are cited by Halfaker et al:

  1. Restivo, Michael, and Arnout van de Rijt. "No praise without effort: experimental evidence on how rewards affect Wikipedia's contributor community." Information, Communication & Society 17, no. 4 (2014): 451-462.
  2. Restivo, Michael, and Arnout Van De Rijt. "Experimental study of informal rewards in peer production." PloS one 7, no. 3 (2012): e34358.

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2019-01-31/Op-ed, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.