Modeling the Wikipedia to Understand the Dynamics of Long Disputes and Biased Articles
Authored by Csilla Rudas, Janos Torok
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.12759/hsr.43.2018.1.72-88
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
The Internet has provided us with a number of online collaborative
environments, including platforms for open software developments and
online encyclopedias such as Wikipedia. Conflicts may arise in the
course of such collaboration, but despite differences of opinion
consensus can be reached. By investigating the consensus-building
processes, we can shed light on the dynamics of social behavior. In
Wikipedia, it is not always easy for editors to agree about article
content, especially considering people's different tolerance levels
towards others and for whatever may be written. In this paper, we focus
on how the editors' attitudes, namely being broad-minded or stubborn,
affect the consensus-building process in a model of Wikipedia. We
further investigate how banning editors affects the speed with which
conflicts or debates can be resolved. For the analysis, we use an
agent-based opinion model developed to simulate different aspects of
Wikipedia. We show that, in most cases, banning agents from editing an
article slows down the consensus building process, and increases the
system's relaxation time. We show further, and counterintuitively, that
with large groups of ``extremists{''} who hold other than the central
opinion, consensus can be reached faster and the article will be less
biased.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Consensus
Wikipedia
Parties
Tolerance
Social conflict
Collaborative
environment
Relaxation time
Banning