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Researcher's Wikipedia Big Data Project Shows Globalization Rate 16

Nerval's Lobster writes "Wikipedia, which features nearly 4 million articles in English alone, is widely considered a godsend for high school students on a tight paper deadline. But for University of Illinois researcher Kalev Leetaru, Wikipedia's volumes of crowd-sourced articles are also an enormous dataset, one he mined for insights into the history of globalization. He made use of Wikipedia's 37GB of English-language data — in particular, the evolving connections between various locations across the globe over a period of years. 'I put every coordinate on a map with a date stamp,' Leetaru told The New York Times. 'It gave me a map of how the world is connected.' You can view the time lapse/data visualization on YouTube."
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Researcher's Wikipedia Big Data Project Shows Globalization Rate

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  • Not "big data" (Score:3, Insightful)

    by epiphani ( 254981 ) <epiphani&dal,net> on Friday June 15, 2012 @05:49PM (#40339799)

    Come on, 37G isn't big data. You'd have a hard time arguing 37TB is big data.

    Cool stuff though.

  • looks exponential :)

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Just like stars. If you consult a starmap, it's much denser near earth than further away. So looking at a star catalogue we'd be correct to surmise we're the center of the universe since all stars cluster around us right? Wrong.

      Sampling bias. Starmaps are clustering stars around us because the stars in our vincinity are better sampled then those further away.

      The movie looks exponential because the density of articles dealing with the present is higher than the the density of articles dealing with events lon

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "looks exponential :)"

      As much as I'd like to think that meant the world is rapidly connecting, much more likely this is due to the fact that Wikipedia has only been around for a decade or so and people are inclined to write about things that are happening now (or have happened recently) than things that happened many years ago.

      If Wikipedia had been available for the entire of those 200 years and had been consistently popular through that time and uniformly across the globe with no language bias then the res

  • by willoughby ( 1367773 ) on Friday June 15, 2012 @08:16PM (#40340939)

    If you're using Wikipedia as a metric to measure anything, you're insane.

    • He's using wikipedia to measure who's editing wikipedia. Considering it's one of the top collaborative sites, it's a pretty good source to determine how global inputs are spreading -- and since he's studying English language entries, he'd expect data to cluster around the USA. What he's trying to find out is how that diverges over time.
  • From reading the NYT article, I understand this is a study of the English version of Wikipedia. That alone should raise a red flag about the significance of the study beyond being a survey of the interests or obsessions of Wikipedia editors.

    It's useful only as a survey of a clearly unrepresentative sample of the world population. It's clearly biased against those that can't write English, itself a much smaller subset of those who can claim some fluency in English.

    It tells us less about history and more abou

  • I'd be interested in how this guy parses "positive" statements vs "negative" statements. English nuance is a tricky wicket, and unlike trying to analyze text from Twitter or Facebook ("Eeewwww, the Civil War is teh Suxorrzz") Wikipedia articles tend to maintain a neutral tone.

    After reading the article (yeah, I know) and viewing the video, it seems like "negative" entries appear most often around periods of time when there's a lot of war. Interesting and obvious... but I'd like to know if periods of religio

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