Revision as of 19:30, 5 June 2009 editCryptic C62 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers9,561 edits →Cold fusion mediation: new section← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 12:44, 28 February 2023 edit undoMalnadachBot (talk | contribs)11,637,095 editsm Fixed Lint errors. (Task 12)Tag: AWB | ||
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'''Welcome!''' | {{TINC}}'''Welcome!''' | ||
Hello, {{BASEPAGENAME}}, and ] to Misplaced Pages! Thank you for ]{{#if:{{{article|}}}|, especially what you did for ]|}}. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful: | |||
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I hope you enjoy editing here and being a ]! Please ] your messages on ]s using four ]s (<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>); this will automatically insert your username and the date. If you need help, check out ], ask me on {{#if:{{{1|}}}|]|my talk page}}, or ask your question and then place <code><nowiki>{{</nowiki>]<nowiki>}}</nowiki></code> before the question on your talk page. Again, welcome! <!-- Template:Welcome --> -- ] (]) 13:33, 2 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
"The more limited your understanding of science, the more scientists resemble masters of the occult, and the more paranormal phenomena seem likely to reflect undiscovered scientific truths." -- Wendy Kaminer | |||
== Comment at ] == | |||
"The annals of science are littered with the names of once-celebrated scientists whose wishful thinking forced them to jump into the fringe. If their pet theories become resistant to contrary evidence, if their logic resists criticism, if their peers suspect that they have fudged results, they are expelled from the scientific community. Pons and Fleischman were at the brink days after they went public. Almost immediately they were told that their peak was in the wrong place. They had to make a decision: retreat or press on despite the damaging evidence. In the end, they leaped into the void and will never rejoin the ranks of mainstream scientists." --Charles Seife ''Sun in a Bottle: the strange history of fusion and the science of wishful thinking''. Viking, 2008. | |||
Hi Woonpton, I noticed your comment at the talk page for the ], and have acted (and commented) there. I encourage you to read the policy ]. It is OK to act when you find mistakes (or to ask, of course, but on a page like that a question could go unnoticed for ages). If challenged on a change, take it to the talk page, just like you did. :) Best, ] (]) 13:37, 2 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
"The wishful thinking about fusion extends far beyond a handful of shunned individuals. Individuals ... do little damage once they are excluded from the community. The real danger comes not from these individuals but from the wishful thinking at the very core of the scientist . This, and not a threat from a handful of renegades, is what makes the dream of fusion energy so dangerous. --also Seife | |||
==Some relevant arbcomm links== | |||
"The burden of proof, as always in science, is on those who claim extraordinary things. It is their responsibility to perform an experiment so well that it forces the scientific community to accept the results." | |||
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== Thank you == | |||
. ] (]) 14:09, 8 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
This should whet your whistle. There are about a dozen more if you are interested. If I can help you any more, let me know. | |||
] |
:Where, and how, did you do it? ] ] 22:33, 8 October 2009 (UTC) | ||
:: He must be referring to my on Jehochman's talk, since that's the only place I've ever had even a brief encounter with him.] (]) 23:18, 8 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Bleep article == | |||
== Hi == | |||
Hi, Woonpton. On the Talk page you said, "The assertion about meditation and crime, while refuted by the actual data, is just another example of the claims made in the movie that aren't supported by science." Maybe look at this.. The criticism by the media of the meditation study is based on Park's assertion, which Rainforth addresses. Just FYI -- not really relevant to the editing of Bleep, since this article doesn't mention Bleep. ] (]) 22:21, 17 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
Back again. I was reading through the cold fusion case. How are you? This time I am really going to make an effort. ] (]) 21:18, 9 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Hello again. I've had a chance to look over the rest of this article. My second impression isn't much better than the first, and your statement that the article contains data in tables form is false. Tables are rows and columns of numbers; what he shows is two graphs. There are no data in this article. (I'm a statistician and it sets my teeth on edge when people mix those up, especially people who have set out to instruct me about statistics). There's not enough information in the graphs for me to draw any conclusions from them, and it's not clear what the units are on the abscissa, but at any rate this isn't a serious research paper; it's a polemic apparently written in answer to a polemic (I haven't read Parks' and probably won't bother) and I don't draw conclusions about anything from such material. It's a lot like the kind of useless debate that seems to characterize Misplaced Pages: nyah, nyah, nyah... back and forth; there's nothing much to be learned from such posturing and taunting. | |||
:Hey, welcome back.] (]) 15:22, 10 October 2009 (UTC) | |||
:You apparently assumed, without bothering to ask, that my comment (in an aside) that the evidence doesn't support the claim made in Bleep about the meditation study, came from Park. No, I came to that conclusion by analyzing the data myself. I won't bore you with the details of my analysis, since I ran those data simply to satisfy my own curiosity and it couldn't be cited anywhere, but I am quite comfortable saying my analyses just don't find anything in those data. There's a lot of nonsense (in many fields, unfortunately, not just yours) that results from taking a GIGO approach to time series or regression analysis, so I'm not terribly surprised or impresssed that someone got some kind of result by grinding these kinds of data through such a routine; spurious results are more the rule than the exception, in my experience with this combination. A simpler approach often gives one a more accurate idea of what's going on, since if there's really something there, not just a statistical artifact, it will show up in the descriptive statistics as well as in the inferential statistics. | |||
==Randy== | |||
:I'm looking right now at a table I just pulled up of crime in Washington DC from 1960 through 2006. The year 1993, the year TM supposedly reduced crime in the city by 23% for two months, Washington DC had the highest incidence of overall violent crime in the 46 years recorded in this dataset. Second highest murder rate, highest rate of rape, highest rate of assaults, which are supposed to be the three types of crime included in the study. It's kind of hard logically, never mind about the statistics, to argue that even though that was the worst year in history in DC for violent crime, it would have been worse without the meditation? There's simply no justification, in my opinion, for making such a claim (with or without fancy statistics); if Park did say that this is more likely a result of wishful thinking than an actual effect, I would be inclined to agree with him. thanks. Woonpton (talk) 04:05, 19 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
I'm going to stun you further, I've never heard of Boise either! Now go and have a sit down, I realise this will have been a shock to you. :) ] (]) 20:41, 13 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:(fanning self) Bring the smelling salts, Martha, I'm feeling faint...] (]) 22:05, 13 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
== |
== Randy from Boise at ANI == | ||
Would you mind putting your comments at the ANI thread about Randy from Boise in a new section? Give it a suitable title as a level 2 header. You can refer back to the previous section, and I know you edit conflicted (probably with me), but I'm trying to focus some of the discussion there into separate threads, rather than have it continue on and on. And yes, I was surprised as well. I had heard of the phrase Randy from Boise many times before, but if you search for the phrase within Misplaced Pages, you will find it is not ''that'' widely known. There are probably many similar phrases that others would be surprised that not everyone has heard of. Misplaced Pages is a very big place, after all. ] (]) 20:46, 13 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
Hi, Woonpton, I saw your message on my talk page. You are correct about your user name being red because you have not started a user page. In fact, ''any'' red link on WP means that the page being linked to does not exist - either because it has never been created, or because it has since been deleted. Your idea of a red link to indicate a newbie user is interesting, but would be a double-edged sword. Since there are a lot of new users who are ] or interested only in ] or are ], they can be met with some suspicion. I note that you have a talk page post from ] about ] proceedings, from which I am guessing you have dived into some of the more controversial areas. I have done the same, so I can understand your decision, but this also means that there may be a little more suspicion of you as a newbie from some quarters. It isn't fair, but then, what is? | |||
:Just <nowiki>==Randy from Boise==</nowiki> will do the trick. It will archive separately, even if no-one replies to it. You could remove it as well. What I'm trying to avoid is a new conversation developing there, which risks the whole thread restarting. ] (]) 21:14, 13 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::As the person who started the page ], I don't know whether to be honored or ashamed. ] (]) 00:34, 14 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Well, since I didn't know about that page, I don't think you can take the credit or the blame for my understanding of the term, but of course I can't speak for Giano, where he picked it up from. I did learn something from that page you started, though; I hadn't seen the original quote from Wired that the term came from; that's really great. I've just heard the term "Randy from Boise" here and there and put together for myself who that guy is, and gone on to use the term, without knowing its etymology and historical context. So thanks, ] (]) 01:12, 14 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Just for my education, do the two words rhyme, eg (Randy, boy-se) or do you pronounce it "bO-I-se"? ] (]) 07:58, 14 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I've heard Boise pronounced both Boy-see and Boy-zee, stress on the first syllable (IPA: /'b$₧₩♭æ/ or /'bфӡת₤Ð/). I started to say Boy-c or Boy-z, but realized you could take the latter as Boy-zed which probably is not an accepted pronunciation. ] (]) 08:24, 14 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I'd heard of this but didn't know the history behind it either so thanks Boris. I thought that whole thread was strange but interesting in a weird kind of way. :) Woonpton, good move removing your comment. I really don't think we've heard the last of it though, at least that's how the ending sounded. Take care all, --]] 10:16, 14 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
==TM== | |||
Regarding watching pages, at the top of each page there are tabs for discussion (the talk page), + (add new section), history, etc. Pressing the 'watch' tab will add that page and its associated talk page (or the associated article or user or whatever page if you are on a talk pgae) to your watchlist. Your links in the top right "] ] ..." include a link to your watchlist, where you will see a link to the most recent edit of all pages you are watching, including who made the edit, when, and what the edit summary says. This is not only useful for watching for replies to questions, but also for changes to pages you are editing or find interesting. From the 'my watchlist' link, you can also edit your watchlist, and you can remove pages from your watchlist either there or by clicking the 'unwatch' tab on a watched page. | |||
What you remmoved was a direct cut and paste from the paper pg.148 which is why there was quotes around it "Direct meta-analyses showed that compared to HE, TM® did not produce significantly | |||
greater benefits on blood pressure (SBP and DBP), heart rate, TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, body weight, | |||
dietary intake, physical activity, measures of stress, anger, and self-efficacy. A subgroup analysis | |||
by study duration showed short-term significant improvement in SBP with TM®, but not over the | |||
long-term. When compared to PMR, TM® produced significantly greater benefits in SBP and | |||
DBP. When RR was compared to BF, RR did not produce significantly greater benefits on blood | |||
pressure (SBP and DBP)." ] (] · ] · ]) 20:07, 11 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
:You mistake my edit. I removed one of the sentences listing the nonsignificant HE analyses because I didn't think they needed to be listed twice in the same paragraph, in other words I removed one of the citations to the HE analyses as being redundant. If you'd prefer to replace the direct quote and remove the paraphrase, I have no objection, but they shouldn't both be in there. | |||
Another thought on red links - they can also be useful if you want to create sub pages. For example, if you wanted a sub page of your user page to work on a section of an article out of the public glare, you can simply add a link by posting a talk page message that says something like <nowiki>]</nowiki>, which produces a red link: ] which you can click on to create the page. If you prefer to name it something relevant to the article, that's cool too. You can also request such pages be deleted when you no longer need them. | |||
The other sentence I removed didn't accurately reflect the subanalysis (the result of the subanalysis was nonsignificant) so I took it out. Will explain further on the article talk. ] (]) 20:15, 11 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
Regarding talk page organisation, there seem to be two distinct schools of thought. Some people prefer to respond on each other's talk pages, so that you get the orange 'new message' bar. Others prefer to keep interactions on a single page, so they are coherent. I fall into the latter group, but either way is fine. If asked to reply on another page (as you requested), I'll do so, but also tend to copy responses to my own page - that way you get the orange bar notification and I get the coherent discussion that I prefer. It's up to you what you prefer. | |||
::However you left the sentence "When compared to PMR, TM® produced significantly greater benefits in SBP and DBP." Which is now out of context... So something that was baried deep in the text seems to have as great of weight as the executive summary conclusion. ] (] · ] · ]) 20:18, 11 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
Finally, I know that it is easy to feel ignored. You might want to try joining a WikiProject in an area of interest, and contribute to it. Long standing editors on those projects tend to be happy to welcome and help us newbies, and can also provide someone to ask for help. Of course, you can also ask me if you like! If I don't know the answer, I'll try and point you in the direction of someone who can help. If I don't answer, I'm probably busy in real life, and so have yet to see your message. Regards, ] (]) 03:26, 19 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::Okay, I see what the problem is. If they are really referring to the HE analyses, as the context implies, then they've misrepresented their own research in the summary, since none of the subanalyses in the HE meta-analyses were significant. There was a subanalysis in a different meta-analysis (TM vs NT) but that one went the other direction: the meta-analysis was nonsignificant but when they dropped out the short term trial and did the analysis only on the two longer term studies, then there was a significant effect, but only for DBP, not SBP. So whichever analysis they meant, the statement in the article, whether a direct quote or not, is inaccurate with respect to the actual analysis. I agree, the PMR thing looks weird stuck on the end there. I take it you would prefer to just reinstate the whole quoted paragraph from the results summary. Go ahead. While I feel helpless to fix most of what's wrong with these articles, I felt fine about removing an inaccuracy, but if the inaccuracy is a direct quote from the study, then I guess there's nothing I can do. I would guess, from reading both the abstract and this research summary, that the abstracts and summaries weren't written by the researchers themselves but by someone less familiar with the data (as a researcher who has done work for the federal government, this doesn't surprise me). ] (]) 20:39, 11 February 2010 (UTC) | |||
== HI == | |||
== Best wishes == | |||
HI - thanks for the message. Agree with what you say but at a loss on how the article could be improved. I think I hate the current version most on grounds of style. But no improvement I can think of that will not incur the wrath of someone or other. ] (]) 18:52, 22 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
Sorry to read at ArbCom about your recent health issues. Hope things turn out well. ] (]) 17:09, 12 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Hi - Bleep talk page... == | |||
== You're very welcome == | |||
Woonpton, anytime someone makes a negative statement that is "to the man" as opposed to "to the argument", that is incivility, see ]. So, when someone says: "Search engine tests only give a vauge guidance on questions of relative importance or connection of subjects, for exmample. They are not used to justify ''singular opinions'' of an ''article's direction'' as ''you are now doing''", you can see that the comment was fine up to sentence one, but sentence two was a not-so-thinly veiled accusation of what is called "POV pushing" around here, and the editor who made the statement is on civility parole specifically for calling people "POV pushers", which IS a personal attack. Finding a weasle-worded way to call someone a "POV pusher" is still incivility. Thanks for <s>asking though</s>bringing it up...] (]) 01:18, 29 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
I had previously looked, but for some reason had not, in fact, discovered until just today that the AHRQ meta-analysis had been discussed three different times before the edit-war episode in Feb 2009 when I first got involved in the substance of these articles, and that, a full year earlier, another editor had suggested perfectly appropriate language to address the meta-analysis and been run off by TimidGuy. I assumed that someone had to have brought it up before 2009 because its conclusions were widely reported in the press, but somehow I never found it in the archives until now. Now knowing that this was something already under discussion for a full year exposes the "we just wanted to discuss it first" argument for what it is. ] (]) 22:01, 18 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
:Woonpton, thanks for pointing out my error, I have struck and revised accordingly. When you refuted my civility assessment , and you said ''"There's nothing uncivil, as I understand civility,..."'', well...I assumed that since you are new here you might not have been familiar with ], specifically the second bullet, and I misinterpreted your comment as an implied question. The editor I was responding to has been quite creative in his use of weasle-words to tip-toe the borders of incivility and find new ways of calling other editors "POV pushers" (as has been well and fully documented dozens of times elesewhere), so as to avoid being blocked. Now, per ], we are instructed to ] even though it can be controversial to do so. I posted here, and (as you will note) avoided mentioning this editor by name, in an attempt to mitigate rather than inflame. ] (]) 14:38, 29 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
== ] == | |||
The ''compact little link thingy'' for that one would have been <nowiki></nowiki>, and it would look like . I think adding it to the RFC to illustrate how the message is not being received would be quite appropriate.] (]) 03:19, 29 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
This arbitration case has been closed and the final decision is available at the link above. The following is a summary of the remedies enacted: | |||
== Hi == | |||
*All editors who are party to this case are instructed to read the principles, to review their own past conduct in the light of them, and if necessary to modify their future conduct to ensure full compliance with them. | |||
*Editors are reminded that when editing in controversial subject areas it is all the more important to comply with Misplaced Pages policies. In addition, editors who find it difficult to edit a particular article or topic from a neutral point of view and to adhere to other Misplaced Pages policies are counselled that they may sometimes need or wish to step away temporarily from that article or subject area, and to find other related but less controversial topics in which to edit. | |||
*Any uninvolved administrator may, in his or her own discretion, impose sanctions on any editor editing Transcendental meditation or other articles concerning Transcendental meditation and related biographies of living people, broadly defined, if, after a warning, that editor repeatedly or seriously violates the behavioural standards or editorial processes of Misplaced Pages in connection with these articles. | |||
*Uninvolved administrators are invited to monitor the articles in the area of conflict to enforce compliance by editors with, in particular, the principles outlined in this case. Enforcing administrators are instructed to focus on fresh and clear-cut matters arising after the closure of this case rather than on revisiting historical allegations. | |||
*From time to time, the conduct of editors within the topic may be re-appraised by any member of the Arbitration Committee and, by motion of the Arbitration Committee, further remedies may be summarily applied to specific editors who have failed to conduct themselves in an appropriate manner. | |||
*] is (i) strongly admonished for incivility, personal attacks, and assumptions of bad faith; and (ii) subject to an editing restriction for one year. Should he make any edits which are judged by an administrator to be uncivil, personal attacks, or assumptions of bad faith, he may be briefly blocked, up to a week in the event of repeated violations. After three blocks, the maximum block shall increase to one month. | |||
*Should any user subject to a restriction or topic ban in this case violate that restriction or ban, that user may be blocked, initially for up to one month, and then with blocks increasing in duration to a maximum of one year, with the topic ban clock restarting at the end of the block. | |||
''On behalf of the Arbitration Committee,'' ~ <span style="color:#F09;">Amory</span><span style="color:#555; font-size:smaller;"> ''(] • ] • ])''</span> 18:31, 6 June 2010 (UTC) | |||
Hi - sorry if my message came across in the wrong way. It's just I have a real life identity I want to protect, and I'm not sure how the email system here works. Happy to discuss - I will enable the email if I can work out how. PS I have been following your comments on the expert withdrawal page and they showed great insight. ] (]) 19:27, 5 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
<br/> | |||
: Oh dear, so sorry. Look, there is no connection of the sort you are trying to make. I was infuriated by the trolling (follow the edit trail) - I keep saying certain things over and over again, and it just seems to me it is deliberate. ] (]) 21:23, 9 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:''']''' | |||
== Statistics == | |||
<br />Hi Woonpton, thanks for your comments on my talk page - I responded there. I haven't been on wiki recently - feeling discouraged about the place, to be honest. Best, ] (]) 10:00, 7 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
You know, at one point during the case I considered offering a free copy of '']'' to any member of the Committee who was seriously considering the statistical evidence provided. But then I thought it wouldn't go over very well. Anyhow, I appreciate your voice of sanity, although since you seem to have some sort of real-life expertise I feel instinctively that I should distrust you... :P ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 22:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC) | |||
==Redirect== | |||
:And rightly so; we don't want any of that riffraff 'round here. :P Thanks, I appreciated that. ] (]) | |||
Would you consider redirecting (<nowiki>#REDIRECT ]</nowiki>) your user page to your talk? That way I wouldn't see your name and think newbie/vandal/not-interested in being part of the community (as many ] are). Only a suggestion, however! Cheers, ] (]) 06:07, 24 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I should have made myself clearer - I didn't mean to imply you were in any way a bad editor - it's because I've seen your contributions that I came to your talk page. In any case, user-space is yours to do with as you wish (within reasonable limits of course), so I respect your decision. ] (]) 06:48, 24 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Ping == | |||
== Aaarrrrgggghhhhh!!!!!!!!! == | |||
Hi stranger, you have email. :) I hope I hear from you, --]] 22:53, 28 August 2010 (UTC) | |||
There, now I feel a tiny bit better. Thanks for listening. This stuff drives me absolutely crazy; I admire your patience. ] (]) 21:43, 24 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Remember, all is for the best, in this, the best of all possible worlds.] (]) 21:58, 24 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Ahh, it's been too long, dear Leibniz/]. <font color="#0000b0">]</font><sup><font color="#b00000">]</font></sup> 00:41, 25 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Use of the wikistalk tool for determining cooperation or collaboration among editors == | |||
== Bleep == | |||
MartinPhi was the only one with a serious objection to the current content. I've asked him to detail it. Once he does, we'll see where we go from there.] (]) 16:52, 30 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
from William M. Connolley's talk page to give context to my answer to it (15:24 Sept 16, 2010) which was too long to post on that page but I wanted to put it somewhere, so I put it here.] | |||
== Bad Example == | |||
Yep. I'm waiting to see whether anyone pays any attention.] (]) 00:33, 25 April 2008 (UTC) | |||
Reviewing this, ] there's something very interesting about the flocking of the user accounts who voted keep here. If you run a wikistalk on the 10 or so users, you'll find a few patterns emerge. It also looks like some users have a closer working relationship than would otherwise appear. ] (]) 02:37, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:That debate is six months old....--] (]) 02:42, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::What kind of pattern? Coke or tea? -- ] (]) 04:41, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Spade == | |||
::Here is a to the list I compiled. – I left out the four who had the lowes edit counts or who did not show any correlation. This left 9 so I added Mark Nutley's today's closest supporter to the list (number 10). There is a high level of correlation, even outside climate chance. The cooperation however does not seem to be politically driven. -- ] (]) 05:08, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
I'll be more than happy to have a side-discussion with you here on the topic. To play devil's advocate (or, you know, "spade's advocate"), let me ask you this: is it possible to identify someone as being a "vandal," using that term, without it being considered name-calling? <font color="#0000b0">]</font><sup><font color="#b00000">]</font></sup> 21:47, 3 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::Um -- 1 case of 6/10 and 5 cases of 5/10? Sorry -- Random chance at work. I went to the UT overlap for them to save time as well. 1 solitary case of 7/10 (to this page, in fact), 4 cases of 6/10. Pretty much in line with random chance. A lot less than found for other assortments, to be sure. ] (]) 10:19, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::Exactly as I already said further down the page it shows nothing. I don't think there is anything particularly random about it though. If you start with editors voting in the same way on a similar article you will expect several non-random ties to come in to play. These will be so complex that any analysis based on random correlations is inherently flawed. ] (]) 10:27, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::Also note that I did ''not'' !vote on the article cited. Period. At all. Nada. No connection. ] (]) 10:25, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::I agree. Why add you into the mix? ] (]) 10:28, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Petri has now run into me on (I think) three quite disparate pages, and has specifically announced a combative attitude about procedures at ]. Somehow I think ''announcing'' a deliberate decision to "wiki-lawyer" on that page is going to benefit him much <g>. Cheers. ] (]) 10:35, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: I really wish you wouldn't act like that. PK's comment is clearly intended a a humourous way of saying "discuss in detail". If everyone has to avoid anything vaguely amusing for fear of being misquoted by the Humour Police elsewhere, wiki will be the poorer ] (]) 10:57, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I added Collect to the list because he seems to have a particular correlation with Mark Nutley. I have pumped into him ''and'' Mark Nutley in three separate context strangely related to climate change advocacy. I wanted to see if any of the others have this interest in coke, tea and caviar. The result is that they did not correlate. From this data we cannot extract signs of ]. -- ] (]) 14:51, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::'''Related to Climate Change???''' Um - how in heaven's name does ] remotely connect to climate change? Indeed, the three of us overlap on a total of two articles. Total. And ''this'' is some sort of major coincidence? BTW, I do not consider ] to be especially related to climate change, and a teesny bit unrelated to mass killings as well. Petri -- complaining about an overlap of a total of two articles is outre at best. ] (]) 15:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::As you see above, I am not complaining. -- ] (]) 15:18, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:Please do not describe wikistalk results using words like "cooperation" or "coordination" or phrases like "close working relationship" or "high level of correlation;" such interpretations are unwarranted. I didn't take time to count up the results, but the link Petri gave doesn't me show much of anything on a quick run through. The vast number of overlaps are 2/10; when you have ten things, there are a lot of combinations of two, but the fact that a lot of pairs of two taken from this group of ten editors have edited articles in common doesn't mean diddly; the only thing that jumps out is that that Nyttend, Tillman and Drmies share a broad interest in geographic places in the US, although not all three of them are interested in the same places; different pairs of the three have edited different place articles. There are very few articles that even 4 or 5 of them have ever edited in common and only one I saw that 6 have edited in common (and remember, all wikistalk tells you is that these people have each edited this article one or more times in its history. It doesn't mean that they have edited it at the same time, much less that they have edited it in a coordinated or cooperative way) and they seem to be mostly climate change related, as you might expect from a group of editors voting on a climate-related AfD. The degree of overlap is so small that to call it a "high level of correlation" is misleading, to say the least. ] (]) 06:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::That is not correct. The problem is with Petri Krohn's query, which failed to search for ''all'' namespaces, and left out one or two users who voted keep. The link he posted does not include these results. ] (]) 07:47, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
*Well I don't see anything particularly astonishing in wikistalk relating to that AfDs keep voters. Just a few misguided regulars, a banned user and a sockpupetteer. Exactly what I would expect. ] (]) 08:34, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::: After seeing that list, I edited a few of the articles on it just to add a little fat to the fire. ]] 11:04, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::And now a user that should be clearly topic banned then ] (]) 12:05, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::Why Poleargo, surely you didn't take that comment seriously? Here's a quarter; go buy yourself a sense of humor. ]] 13:53, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::That was my sense of humour. I can't believe you missed it. ] (]) 13:59, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
I'm not used to reading wikistalk results. I can't see anything very obvious in the list (Nyttend is a new name), other than a lot of 2/10 with Nyttend and Tillman. Is that what I'm supposed to see? ] (]) 08:52, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:I don't think there is anything there at all. ] (]) 09:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::I can't say I know exactly what's there, but it does establish relationships between editors. I'm looking at and ], which I wasn't aware of until now. ] (]) 10:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::No still nothing. ] (]) 10:15, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
@Viriditas: ''I can't say I know exactly what's there, but it does establish relationships between editors.'' No, it does nothing of the sort. I find it rather surprising (although I guess I shouldn't be surprised any more by anything that happens on this project) that someone who is so apparently concerned about a political campaign to discredit science would be so willing to take a pseudoscientific (or maybe I should call it pseudostatistical, to be more precise) approach to establishing relationships. I suppose, then, that Viriditas endorses the use of wikistalk results introduced as evidence in the CC case to establish the existence of a coordinated pro-science "bloc" on climate change pages? Those results, while showing much more overlap than these do, were no more conclusive in showing a degree of cooperation or coordination among editors than these are, as I demonstrated on the PD talk page. And as I also pointed out on the same page, groups of SPAs who have actually been shown to have worked in concert to promote a single-purpose agenda on Misplaced Pages, tend to score very low on this tool, and groups of editors who are not working together, but who have been around a while and edit a lot and in a lot of different areas, tend to have a much higher degree of overlap with each other. | |||
:I should hope so, but I don't know how the people who are out with the pitchforks to eliminate all name calling would answer that. What I'm worried about is something a little different. I do (so far) tend to hold the same position as GTB on the usefulness of namecalling; it's not helpful in discussions. I do agree with that, as long as the cutoff for name calling is sensible. Maybe that's where my dilemma is; I'm not sure where the cutoff should be. What I'm worried about is that a general statement about, say "fringe advocates" not referring to any person, could be interpreted as name calling; that would go way too far as far as I'm concerned. Not sure if that answers your question.] (]) 22:07, 3 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
@Collect: ''Pretty much in line with random chance.'' As I pointed out to you elsewhere, the degree of departure from random chance is a statistical concept that must be established by a statistical test in order for the statement to have any meaning. The wikistalk tool does not provide a statistical test, so there appears to be no basis for these emphatic statements about how consistent something is with "random chance." You stated on the case pages that there was a "significant difference" between the overlap among six arbitrators (27 user talk pages in common) and the overlap among six pro-science editors on climate change articles (29 user talk pages in common). From this statement, one can assume that in your scheme of "statistical reasoning," in a group of six editors, two user talk pages in common would have to be considered a significant departure from "random chance." (this follows logically from your assertion that a difference of two--29 vs 27-- is "significant.") Extending that logic, one would have to consider that if two pages in common is a significant departure from "random chance" for a group of six editors, then one page in common among a group of ten editors (as shown on Viriditas' wikistalk link), which is much less probable by chance than a page in common among a group of six editors, could well also be a significant departure from chance. The point I'm trying to make is that this whole line of reasoning is simply without any statistical foundation, a house built on sand, and no one should draw any conclusions about degree of cooperation among editors, one way or the other, from using this tool. ] (]) 16:15, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::Sure, that answers it. To me, at least, it shows that you are aware of the definition of name calling, which is an important starting place in this discussion. Do you see WP:SPADE as advocating for name calling? (Not trying to be annoying here with the one question per response, it's just the way I think; feel free to pepper me with questions, as well!) <font color="#0000b0">]</font><sup><font color="#b00000">]</font></sup> 23:14, 3 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Empirical data from 300 editors taken 6 at a time establishes a pretty good basis for determining "random chance." Ask a math professor how much data is involved in 300 people taken six at a time seeking to maximize amount of overlap - and where said empirical data never got to 15 pages where all 6 people edited out of all the empirical observations (and only occurred once in all those observations), whether amounts much greater than 15 would be non-random. ] (]) 01:10, 9 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, no, I don't need to "ask a math professor" I ''am'' (or have been before I retired), a statistics professor, and you are entirely missing my point. The number of samples you analyzed to draw your conclusions becomes quite irrelevant if the conclusions are shown to be flawed, and when I showed that a group of disparate editors, obviously not editing in concert with each other, yielded an even higher number of pages in common than the group of editors that you identified as "extraordinarily cohesive," and that a group od editors known to have edited in a coordinated fashion to push a POV in a topic area scored very low on this purported measure of cooperation, the game was up. Whatever this tool might measure, if anything, it's not cooperation or working relationships among editors. | |||
:::I spent some time this afternoon running combinations of myself with various other editors; since I know whether I have a working relationship with these other editors, that knowledge serves as a check to evaluate the usefulness of the tool for determining whether people have a working relationship. What I found was interesting; I found that when I ran myself in a group of people with whom I share a scientific background and a similar view of the goals of the project and concerns about whether those goals will be achieved, but with whom I have not actually edited or even discussed specific articles, I found that the group of the four of us exhibited a high degree of "cohesiveness;" specifically there were 25 pages that the four of us had edited in common, and in "pairwise comparisons" I had 121 pages in common with Short Brigade Harvester Boris, 60 in common with MastCell, and 56 in common with Science Apologist, even though I've never edited with any of them, except for a very brief encounter with Science Apologist on What the Bleep Do We Know, in which we disagreed rather strongly. So it's definitely not cooperative or coordinated editing that this tool measures. In this case, it seems to measure nothing but our independently similar interests and views, since for all intents and purposes we've never edited in the same topic areas. And at the same time, I found that when I analyzed a group of people with whom I've had a fairly close working relationship editing articles together, I got a much lower number of shared pages. And when I ran myself with people with whom I have not only never edited, but have never even encountered on discussion or policy pages, and as far as I know do not share interests or views with me (SlimVirgin, Lar) I got numbers similar to the numbers I got when I ran the group of people I did have a working relationship with. In other words, this tool does not validly serve its purported purpose of identifying working relationships among editors, since it doesn't discriminate between editors who work together and editors who don't work together. | |||
:::No, I appreciate that, it helps me think, too. It depends on which version you mean. The present version of course doesn't advocate for name calling, or much of anything but being just annoyingly nice and polite and sweet, which makes my teeth hurt. The earlier version..... actually, that's a very good question, because it comes back to what is name calling. It advocates for calling POV pushers what they are; I guess the question is whether that's name-calling or not. I still tend to agree with GTB that it's not helpful to do so, but no, I guess I wouldn't say it's name-calling. But how is it useful, I guess that's where I'm not sure. On the other hand, if this is headed in the direction of saying (using an actual example from the Bleep page) that it's uncivil to say that someone's unique and OR position on an issue is a "singular position" because to say "your position is singular" is a veiled way of calling the person a "POV Pusher" and calling a person a "POV Pusher" is a violation of CIVIL -- I don't want to go there. So I guess I have to consider whether I think to equate calling someone "POV Pusher" with name-calling is the first step down that slippery slope. ] (]) 23:36, 3 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Woonpton, the tool most certainly establishes relationships between editors, and this is not in any dispute. You appear to be very confused on this point. Anyone can use this tool to create an ], and we used to have a tool (can't find it at the moment) that created these models based on RfA data, showing relationships by nomination. Beyond that, you appear to enjoy engaging in fantasy and fighting with strawmen, with statements like "I suppose, then, that Viriditas endorses the use of wikistalk results introduced as evidence in the CC case to establish the existence of a coordinated pro-science "bloc" on climate change pages". I've said nothing like that. I've said that it establishes relationships between editors, and your reply, "it does nothing of the sort" is wrong. Along these lines, I would encourage someone, anyone, to model the relationships of participating editors in the current arbcom case and analyze them closely. ] (]) 21:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:: No, I am not confused, in the least. This tool does ''not'' establish relationships between editors; the idea that it does ''is'' in dispute; I am disputing it, and even if all 12 million registered editors of Misplaced Pages were laboring under the misconception that the tool establishes relationships between editors, that wouldn't make the idea any more valid. All the tool does is indicate pages which various combinations of the group of editors in question have each edited even once, at any time in the page's history. The edits don't even have to be in the same year, much less the same discussion (if a talk page) or the same paragraph (if an article). To infer that these adjacencies establish a relationship, much less a "close working relationship" between editors is simply not warranted, and I've posted enough counterexamples to make it clear empirically that such an inference isn't warranted. | |||
::::Well the other problem with the sanitization of this essay is that it doesn't change behavior, anyway. It just eliminates the explanation for why some people do what they do. Regardless of what this essay says, people have already learned the following: (1) On Misplaced Pages, you will get in trouble if you say "POV pusher". (2) On Misplaced Pages, you will not get in trouble if you say "edit X by user X pushed a POV". If you didn't already know that, and I'm sure you already did, call me ]. It's all a semantic game, and deleting the core idea of this essay doesn't change a thing. Well, actually, deleting the core idea of this essay makes Misplaced Pages's soul die a little bit. <font color="#0000b0">]</font><sup><font color="#b00000">]</font></sup> 00:04, 4 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:: |
::I'm not sure you understand what a straw man argument is; I certainly wasn't making one when I said that if you believe that wikistalk "establishes relationships" among editors, then it follows logically that you would have endorsed the wikistalk analysis that was offered in evidence on the CC case, purporting to establish statistically that "pro-science" editors were editing in a coordinated bloc. I was simply wondering whether you did or did not endorse that analysis. ] (]) 12:56, 9 September 2010 (UTC) | ||
:::We have two users, Woonpton and Viriditas. We want to find articles where only those two editors have both edited. is a link to wikistalk. Please note the ] allowing the user to choose from 10 ] and their talk pages. (Please disregard the "summary" and "thread" namespaces for now, as that refers to the ] MediaWiki extension currently under development.) Default search is set to the default namespace, ]. A check box appears to the right, allowing one to search through all namespaces. Choose your namespace and enter up to ten users. An explanation of the results can be found ]. As an example, I chose all namespaces and entered in two users, "Viriditas" and "Woonpton". are the results. All the tool does, is show which pages were edited by you and I. The results are reliable, and we can compare them with another tool. is the same query made at Intersect Contribs. The results are identical. ] (]) 00:26, 10 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::Actually, I finally realized what happened, after running several different combinations to try to identify the source of the discrepancy. I was running the thing in two different tabs and somehow in one of the tabs the "all" button got unchecked, so it was only counting user talk pages in one tab and "all" in the other one. So I have struck my accusation of unreliability for the tool; it does apparently reliably count what it counts, the pages that have been edited in common. As far as I know, this thread is the first time we've ever crossed paths, so the fact that we have edited 24 pages in common says nothing at all about a working relationship between us, which is one of the points I've been trying to make. ] (]) 07:40, 10 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Exactly, except I'm not saying it for myself, I'm saying it on behalf of the essay. I don't often "call a spade a spade", being rather fond of semantic games myself, but I think the pessimists among us should retain that right. This essay should be a good primer on how some people think it should be done. <font color="#0000b0">]</font><sup><font color="#b00000">]</font></sup> 01:02, 4 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::The tools give us the results, but the interpretation of the relationship is up to us. Let's be precise: Based on the intersection, we've only edited ''one'' article in the main namespace together, namely ]. Looking closer at these edits, beginning with myself, the edit history shows that I made one cleanup edit in March 2005 which brought the article into compliance with ]. I made a second maintenance edit in May 2006 consisting of recent changes/watchlist vandalism patrol. So, I made two cleanup/maintenance edits having little if any impact on the overall presentation of the content. There's nothing interesting or controversial about these edits, and they could have been made by anyone. Now, let us look at your edit. In May 2008, you ''deleted'' content with the edit summary, "rm unsourced (OR) graph". You removed a graph, ] that you claimed was original research. The graph was sourced to which appears to originate from data by an author named Mike Reynolds, who published the book, '''' (1996) after his daughter was murdered. Regardless of the merits of your edits, it is clear that they were ''not'' routine cleanup or maintenance. Therefore, the ''relationship'' between our two edits is very weak and insignificant. If, however, I had made the same reversion of what I deemed to be OR, or made a series of edits removing content from anti-crime activist Mike Reynolds from the article, the relationship between our edits would be a bit stronger. Looking at the editors who voted to keep at ], we see a record of strong coordination and support between each other, on many different articles, far and above routine cleanup and maintenance. The simplest explanation for this instance of coordination is ], and this observation was made by ]. We see similar behavior on the recent arbcom case, where the same set of editors flocked to support GregJackP's disputed edits, while the overwhelming majority of uninvolved editors did not. We also see this flocking on various AfD's and RfC's, indicating that this editing behavior cannot be classified as random, as the evidence suggests a strong working relationship over time, devoted solely to the topic of climate change, and more importantly, a working relationship that seeks to advocate for the minority POV of ]. The fact that such a large number of editors are working together to promote a minority POV forces one to look closer into this phenomenon, and the relationships which emerge after analyzing the intersection of editorial contributions to common articles. ] (]) 03:20, 11 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::''The tools give us the results, but the interpretation of the relationship is up to us.'' This shows that I'm not making a dent, and what's more, that we're not even speaking the same language. As a statistician, the word "relationship" has a specific meaning to me; the wikistalk tool does not establish relationship in any sense that's meaningful to me. Broadly speaking, you could say there are three degrees of "relationship" between things. First, there are random events, or "noise," in which there's no statistically discernable relationship between things. Then there are things that have been established through statistical testing to be related, associated, or correlated (in fact, the whole purpose and business of statistics is to separate relationship from randomness). Finally, determinations of causality can sometimes be made between things that are statistically associated, by the use of further careful experimental design and statistical analysis. In the quoted sentence, and indeed in this whole discussion, the three levels have been conflated to an alarming degree. | |||
::::::Let's look at my wikistalk overlap with Viriditas, since he spent so much time analyzing it. V states above that since my one edit on the three strikes law was not similar in character to his, the "relationship" established by wikistalk would have to be interpreted as a "weak" or "insignificant" relationship, but if we had made similar edits, the relationship would be stronger, even though my one edit was two years after his last of two edits to the article. Okay, I went to the supermarket today and bought Coke; by this logic, the fact that any complete stranger went to the same supermarket year before last would constitute a relationship (although a weak or "insignificant" relationship to be sure) but if on further investigation we discovered that the stranger had bought Coke two years ago, then that would indicate a stronger relationship. No, that's not a relationship at all, it's just two random events being misinterpreted as a relationship. And even if a stranger went to the same supermarket at the same time I was there and bought Coke, that wouldn't be a relationship either; it's just a concurrence. But, (keeping in mind that these are just individual cases chosen to illustrate by analogy the levels of connectedness), if my neighbor and I were planning a block party and decided that each of us would buy a case of Coke, and then we each went to the supermarket and bought the Coke, ''that's'' not only a relationship, but a causal relationship. But a computer program that counted everyone who went to the supermarket and bought Coke over a period of years would not be able to distinguish between the vast number of people coincidentally buying Coke, and me and my neighbor, or any other combination of people buying coke in a coordinated fashion, and an analyst would be making a mistake if he misinterpreted the coincidences as being associated with each other, much less as being causally related. | |||
= | |||
::::::Collect at least understood that there should be some sort of statistical basis for asserting a departure from randomness before interpreting these results, when he attempted to create a sort of sampling distribution for groups of six. However, I'm puzzled by his challenge above, that I should "ask a math professor" how many ways there are to take 300 things six at a time. If he did indeed run all the unique combinations of 300 editors taken six at a time, he would have known how many runs he'd made and could have rattled it off; it's an impressive number. I knew that it would be a big number, 300!/6!294!, but it wasn't until last night that I sat down and calculated it, and then ran it through a computer program just to check my arithmetic; there are 962,822,846,700 of them. If he really ran all those runs I'm impressed, but am puzzled by his assurance that he sought to "maximize the amount of overlap"--by what means? By how he selected the sample of 300? And if so, how did he ensure that the groups he chose to draw conclusions about were similar to the group chosen to generate the "sampling distribution"? | |||
== Thanks for your support == | |||
Saw your comment, and I appreciate your support during this somewhat surreal experience. ] (]) 21:19, 22 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::I'm also somewhat puzzled by the statement that there was only one combination in which the number of shared user talk pages was as much as 15, so he figured that anything over 15 with a group of six was significantly different from chance. The logic is good as far as it goes; by choosing a cutoff clear at the high end of the sampling distribution for the statistic, you stand a good chance of not being wrong if you say that a number higher than that is unusual (but IFF the groups of editors chosen for analysis are similar in nature to the groups of editors chosen to establish the sampling distribution). But even if that assumption were satisfied, logistically I'm puzzled how he determined that 15 was the highest value the statistic took. The customary thing to do here would be to program your runs to compile the chosen test statistic (number of shared user talk pages among all the editors in the group) and create a sampling distribution of the statistic itself so that you would know the shape and variance of the distribution. If he didn't run a computer program that generated the distribution of the statistic, how did he establish that 15 was the highest number generated; did he look at every single one of the nearly 963 billion results to determine that? | |||
==Please just take a break== | |||
Sometimes the best thing is just to step away from WP for a while. I for one really appreciate your voice of reason here.--] (] | ]) 20:22, 5 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I second Filll's words. ] (]) 03:18, 6 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::At any rate, while the claim of running a large number of analyses to establish a quasi-"sampling distribution" gives a veneer of "mathiness" to the claim of "extraordinary cohesiveness" between a group of pro-science editors on the CC articles, the claim fell apart for me when I substituted non-science editors for some of the science editors in the group and got even more shared pages than Collect had found for the science editors (On the PD talk page I said 34 shared pages, but counting again I get 37, vs 29 for Collect's sample.) So I think there's a problem, a flawed assumption or premise somewhere that invalidates the conclusion. I'm not sure whether Collect has adequately demonstrated that anything over 15 shared user talk pages by six editors is (statistically) significantly different from chance (answers to the above questions could increase my degree of certainty either way, especially the implied question about how he ensured that the editors who generated the sampling statistic were similar enough to the editors chosen to draw conclusions about that one could have some confidence in the validity of the statistic. Generally that assurance is provided by being sure that both the sample chosen to create the sampling distribution and the experimental samples are randomly selected, but in this case it would have to be a different criterion, since the experimental sample is anything but randomly chosen). But whether or not he has demonstrated that his "sampling distribution" provides a valid standard, he has certainly failed to demonstrate that anything over 15 shared user talk pages establishes "extraordinary cohesiveness" among these six editors, let alone a further presumption of cooperative or coordinated editing. In other words, regardless of whether he has adequately demonstrated an "association" between the editors, he has certainly not established that his interpretation of the association, or his assignment of "cause" for the association, is correct. | |||
== Would you like to elaborate? == | |||
::::::As for Viriditas' claims above about the editors, I find nothing in his (very differently-conceptualized from Collect's)analysis of wikistalk data to support those claims; I've been over and over those results today and I just don't see anything there. There are 673 occurrences of overlap among these ten editors, including 40 pages where four of the editors overlap, 21 where five overlap, 16 where six overlap, 2 where seven overlap, 4 where eight overlap, and 1 where nine overlap (the eights and the nine are all noticeboards). Even if he had given each and every one of these 673 overlaps the same minute attention and interpretation he gave to the one mainspace overlap between him and me, there's no statistical basis to draw any conclusions from about whether these are anything but random observations, and even if if one were to accept the notion that subjective interpretations provide a valid substitute for statistics, if he were as mistaken in those interpretations as he was in this case I wouldn't give much credence to the analyses. | |||
I'm always open to becoming BetterInformed, if you've got data. ] | (] - ]) 03:55, 2 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::I didn't remember editing that page, at all, and was very surprised to read that I had removed a graph. It's not the sort of thing I would ordinarily do on my own; I'm not that bold an editor. So when I got some time last night, I looked up the history of that edit. It turns out I had been watching the NPOV noticeboard, and someone complained there about a graph they thought was misleading. I looked at the graph and agreed that its presentation was indeed misleading; it was presented to support the idea that crime had gone down in California because of the three strikes law, but in fact, anyone with a nominal ability to read graphs could see just looking at it that all but one of the crimes depicted in the graph had started going down before the law was passed, from two years to as long as ten years before. I don't see anything to support Viriditas' assertion that the graph was sourced to someone named Mike Reynolds or to data supplied by Mike Reynolds; the graph was created by a Misplaced Pages editor and the description on the file says the graph was created to "evaluate" the claims in that blog article about the three strikes law, which you say was written by Mike Reynolds although I can't find a name on it anywhere. (The data themselves were publicly available California crime statistics, not data supplied by the author of the blog article, whoever he was.) I would say the graph was created by the Misplaced Pages editor to support the claims rather than to evaluate them; if the intent had been to evaluate the claims, the reasonable comparison would have been between CA and states without a three strikes law; such a comparison would have shown that crime went down generally in the US during that period, in states without three strikes laws just as in states with them. The text of the article did mention (in another section) that the reduction in crime was nationwide and not just in three-strikes states, but the text of the California section was written to suggest that crime went down in California ''because'' of the three strikes law, and this graph was drawn, and placed, to support that text, even though the graph, carefully observed, didn't even support the assertion. There was a discussion on the article talk page which I participated in briefly after the brief NPOV/N discussion; I said there that I thought the graph should be deleted, and someone suggested I could delete it. I said I didn't know how; someone told me how to delete it, and I did, and have never looked at that page again til today. I notice that the article is much more neutral now than it was that day in 2008 when I visited it, and that the graph is not there, so I assume the removal must have had consensus. The graph was OR, or maybe more precisely SYNTH (I was new then and didn't know the difference) and didn't belong in Misplaced Pages. I know nothing of "anti-crime activist Mike Reynolds" and wasn't acting in opposition to him, as you seem to be suggesting above; the only place I've seen him mentioned is by you, in this thread. My only "opposition" is to any misuse, misrepresentation, or misinterpretation of data, by ''anyone'', and if there were editors working on that article who had an "anti-Mike Reynolds" agenda, I wouldn't know about it, or them. The implication that if there had been such editors, the similarity of my edit to one of theirs would establish, ''prima facie'', a relationship between us, is not credible and illustrates in a small way how misleading the overinterpretation of this tool can be. | |||
== Thanks for the support == | |||
::::::Viriditas' description of what I was doing there is so far from what actually happened, it just shows how wrong a quick impression can be. No, it's not up to us to "interpret the relationship" established by wikistalk; the wikistalk tool does not "establish relationships" and subjective interpretation of its results is not much different from reading tea leaves (and by the way, I see nothing in either Petri's or Viriditas' wikistalk data to elucidate the suggestions above that there are patterns in these data related to tea, coke, or caviar). The establishment and interpretation of relationships rests, not on subjective interpretation, but on the strength of the data themselves and how well they stand up to the rigor of statistical testing. There may some truth to the charge of votestacking and "close working relationship" among the editors named above, or there may not be, but wikistalk will not establish that truth, nor will selective interpretation of the results establish it, and people who point to wikistalk results as support for their suspicions about editors working as a coordinated "bloc" are not serving the project well. ] (]) 15:24, 16 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
Thanks for the support. Nice to know I made an impression on you during your formative time as an editor. | |||
* As a side note, I'm curious what you think of , which is potentially at least somewhat apposite. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 16:44, 16 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
Couple of things: I had to reformat a bit (see ), because the way you did it broke the counter. I hate editing numbered lists, and always have to play with it five or six times. | |||
::I wasn't able to print it out (I'm old-fashioned; in order to really absorb an article, I need a hard copy I can hold in my hand and underline and write comments in the margin and so forth) but on a quick scan from the screen, I'd say this is a very good article. It is indeed apposite, in several ways, except that the analysis is on a more sophisticated level statistically than the discussion here about the wikistalk tool. This article is pointing out the difficulties in interpreting the results of regression-based "causal analysis" and showing how even if you subject multivariate data to this kind of "sophisticated" statistical analysis, you can't be sure that you have adequately separated influences from similarities or affinities. The wikistalk tool of course generates nothing so sophisticated in terms of statistical analysis; it's just a counting tool, so it behooves us to be even more leery of using something primitive like this to support statements about relationships among people. ] (]) 18:52, 16 September 2010 (UTC) | |||
As for why she responded to you: you said that I had ''never insulted or bullied anyone'', and she was saying that so far as she was concerned, I had insulted her. | |||
== Monty Hall problem == | |||
But yes, the RFA process is excruciating, and it's pretty obvious that I'm not going to make the 75% cutoff. It's be interesting to see how it plays out in the end, though. It's never over until its over.—](]) 00:56, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
Welcome to the MHP discussion, it would be good to have a now voice in this argument which has been running for over two years now. | |||
:Well, it just shows I still don't know how to do things, that I broke the counter, but thanks for fixing it. I would have thought it was quite clear exactly what the context of my comment was, that I was speaking entirely within the context of my experience of working with you on that page. To interpret my saying that during that time, in that context, you never insulted or bullied anyone, as an insistence that in all your time on Misplaced Pages you had never insulted or bullied anyone, is rather odd, if not bizarre. How would I know, without checking every single edit you'd ever made? All I can know is from my own experience; that experience weighs more for me than that one older diff that she's so exercised about, that had nothing to do with my comment. Thanks for taking the time to explain her response, but it still makes no sense to me. I guess the first RfA I've commented in will also be my last. Good luck to you. You made an impression because you were one of the few reasonable and intelligent, sane and kind people I met during that time, which says more about Misplaced Pages than it does about you, not to take away from your qualities or anything, just saying. P.S. I notice that the Bleep article has eroded somewhat since then, but I don't care any more about it. ] (]) 05:19, 5 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
The article is already a FA so the argument is about rather unimportant matters of detail. I would be happy to explain what the main argument is about if you wish to join in. (Reply here) ] (]) 13:58, 9 November 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Dude == | |||
:Well, I can't think of any sane reason to jump into an argument which has been running for over two years about rather unimportant matters of detail, but thanks for the welcome. I've read enough of the interminable mediation subpage to have a pretty good idea what the points of contention are; I find them mind-numbingly tedious, trivial, pedantic, and irrelevant. If no progress has been made in two years of discussion and two mediations, I certainly have no interest in pouring any of my time into an inevitably futile effort of trying to help. | |||
:As for the article being an FA, I think it's probably time for FAR. I had looked at the article a couple of years ago (I don't remember exactly when, so I can't name a specific version) and thought it an excellent article: elegant, informative, illustrated with great visual aids to understanding; it was really quite remarkable, I thought, and after that I always used that article as an example of Misplaced Pages at its very best. I hadn't gone back to look again but assumed it had stayed a great article, until after I started reading that mediation page recently and went back to look at the article again. I was embarrassed that I've continued to praise the article; sometime between when I saw it last and now, it has lost its soul. It's way too long and filled with confusing and irrelevant minutiae; it's a mess. It seems unlikely to me that a lay reader, even if they did manage to read it all the way through, would be able to make heads or tails of it. So I think it's more than a trivial argument about unimportant details; something's gone wrong with the article at its core, and it seems unlikely that anything can be done about it. ] (]) 06:21, 10 November 2010 (UTC) | |||
What's going on. I decided to check in and there was your message. Nice to see you are still here. I got rather irritated with that 'Bleep' business and had a break for the state of my health. Plus I haven't been at home for some time, travelling and so on. Back for the Autumn, so what's up? Something easier perhaps. ] (]) 19:28, 7 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Please pardon my intrusion. The inaccessibility of the article, that you described so well, is the very reason I stay in the fray. Against all rational explanation. ] (]) 15:42, 10 November 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Your comments about Cool Hand Luke == | |||
Hello @Woonpton, it was nice to hear you are a statistician and your opinion about the MHP page. I'd be interested in your comments on , an attempt to start over with a clean slate, taking preemptive action on the bone of contention on wikipedia. See also a recent draft of a . ] (]) 04:46, 14 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
Not that I really care what others think of me or my votes, but I just think you need to revisit how I voted here. You missed my change of heart. ] <small><sup>] ]</sup></small> 06:35, 3 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I'd prefer not to be further drawn into this dispute, thank you. ] (]) 07:31, 14 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
== A New Approach? == | |||
:: Very wise! I am no longer disputing, I am writing reliable sources (that's my job), since the existing ones are poor quality. Hence my sincere interest to know your reactions to new articles on MHP in other locations. In an attempt to get it right at the core. The wikipedia article is bogged down on a stupid controversy which will interest almost no readers while in the meantime life goes on and there are several new insights out there which add to the richness of the topic. ] (]) 08:20, 14 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
SlimVirgin has suggested a ] for trial with Israel-Palestine conflicts. What do you think of the general idea for application to fringe science topics? Also, rootology has proposed an approach for addressing a naming conflict regarding baronets ]. Any thoughts on applying it to fringe science topics, say with two representatives of each side plus a neutral admin to look at admin issues and a mediator (6 people, total - consensus being 5/6, minimum)? Best, ] (]) 05:42, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Trust me, you do not want to know what I think, but luckily for both of us, what I think is not relevant here at Misplaced Pages, where we are required to rely on existing secondary sources for our summary of a topic. We don't publish new research; if your formulations are found to be useful by other scholars in the field they will be incorporated into secondary sources (such as literature reviews or academic books devoted to the topic) by independent scholars, and when that happens, they can be incorporated into the Misplaced Pages article. That's how Misplaced Pages works. ] (]) 18:14, 14 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::Speaking of reviews, I recently had an offer from the editor of a respectable-if-not-quite-first-tier, peer-reviewed, MEDLINE-indexed journal to write a review article on the topic of my choosing. Sadly, the first 3 or 4 review topics that came to mind were those where, on Misplaced Pages, ignorance is currently prevailing over reason because of a lack of suitable secondary-source reviews. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 04:39, 15 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::Well, then, get those reviews written! :-) In the case of the Monty Hall problem, it seems from the outside (I haven't edited the article or talk, but have been watching the dispute from a cautious distance, > 10 foot pole) that there are adequate secondary sources that are not being put to good use in the article, while primary sources are being endlessly debated and second-guessed as to what the source really meant, or (more often, even) sources ignored altogether in favor of editors coming up with their own original research and synthesis; most of the disputes are about individual editors' ideas of what the Monty Hall problem is and how the solution should be argued, completely independent of sources. It's a mess. ] (]) 05:06, 15 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::::Yes, it sounds pretty bad. About reviews, I think I don't have what it takes. I would never, ever feel comfortable writing a review about a topic outside my field of expertise. (I have a hard enough time feeling fully on top of my own field). But to be a truly successful <s>charlatan</s> dissident from scientific orthodoxy, one needs to be able to leverage one's expertise in field A to make confident pronouncements about field B, despite the fact that one knows less than nothing about field B. Most forms of arrant nonsense feature at least one individual leveraging their credentials in such a fashion. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 05:13, 15 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I've been thinking about your dilemma in light of an only tangentially-related phenomenon I'm seeing more and more of lately in several different topic areas, of Misplaced Pages editors writing and publishing papers so the papers can be used as reliable sources to advance a POV in the Misplaced Pages article. It makes me think of the Escher drawing with the hand drawing the hand. At what point do we have to give up and say the whole system of academic work has broken down and the agenda-driven Misplaced Pages model has won over honest scholarship? Does that worry you? It worries me, but maybe it's just time for a long walk. Regards, ] (]) 21:50, 16 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
::: Don't worry, I don't make my living by writing wikipedia pages, I make my living by writing reliable (indeed, highly cited!) sources in mathematics and statistics. And I do know how (and why) wikipedia works, and have no wish to change that or to break the rules. That's why I took the trouble to write up some "Truths", of similar startling nature to something like "6 is not a prime number because it is divisible by 2", and get them published in peer reviewed (scientific) literature. At least no stupid editor can now prevent a less stupid editor from using this "Truth" in the future, on the pretext that it is not written up explicitly in some "reliable source". Too bad that I'm now disqualified, by my very expertise, for editing an article in my own field. Misplaced Pages will have to wait ten years or so for new (to the literature, not new at all to sensible people) insights, and for reconciliation of the squabbling school children. ] (]) 15:32, 15 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
:Oh, shall we talk here for a while? I have to go spray blackberries so I can't spend much time on this right now, but my initial reaction is "been there done that." Not the same approach, but the same logic, that something that works for a geopolitical struggle should work for science vs fringe. The logic is flawed, surely you can see that. In one set of cases, you have two points of view, neither of which is "right" and both very strongly held; in this kind of case neutrality really is sort of halfway between the two points. But when you're talking about science subjects, where there really is a "right" answer (the earth is not flat) then to say "some people say the earth is flat and some people say the earth is not flat" makes for a really stupid encyclopedia. When you compromise between science and nonsense, the result is some version of nonsense. Anyway, the experiment was not a success. You really have missed a lot. More later. ] (]) 15:05, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
I don't recall seeing the data you said you were tabulating . Did you put this someplace where I might have missed it? I think it might be quite helpful now that Elen has drafted a proposed decision. -- ] <small>(])</small> 03:57, 14 March 2011 (UTC) | |||
::I recognise the problem to which you refer, but I was actually more thinking the behaviour and psychology issues. Entrenched views from Jewish and Palestinian editors coupled with disruptive behaviour does form a reasonable analogy to the fringe science issues. Neither side is going to change their beliefs, but if they can be helped to find a way to work together to produce ''policy compliant'' content then surely there would be useful lessons for resolving some fringe science conflicts. Best, ] (]) 15:27, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Comment and thanks == | |||
:::Before I could get my shoes on, the windsock out my window was standing straight out from its stick, so I can't spray blackberries after all today. It looks like we're back to where we started. You say you recognize the problem, but I'm not convinced that you do. If you really think that "entrenched views from Jewish and Palestinian editors coupled with disruptive behavior does form a reasonable analogy to the fringe science issues" then no, you don't see what the problem is at all. | |||
I was surprised to see old Monty up for Arbitration, likewise amazed by the trivia under contention, and unreasonably cheered to see your occasional good-humored comment in the mix. Thanks for that :) I hadn't seen the article when it was really good; FAR with a historical link isn't a bad idea for attracting new eyes. | |||
As to "editors writing and publishing papers so the papers can be used as reliable sources to advance a POV in the Misplaced Pages article" -- this happens within academia all the time, without the bit about Misplaced Pages... counterfactual claims and theories can survive for a generation on the industry and focus of a group of experts who believe in them, or absent belief have hinged their careers on them. But at least it lets us offload the question of formal peer review onto a scientific publishing system that has had a few centuries to reach a productive equilibrium. <span style="border:1px solid #eee;padding:0 2px 0 2px;background-color:white;color:#bbb;">–]]</span> 06:53, 2 March 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::I just ran through your contributions again, and it looks as if you've never edited in fringe areas. Here's a proposal for you: go work on the cold fusion article for six weeks, or at least watchlist it and pay attention, and then come back and talk to me; maybe then there would be a possibility for some common ground from which to launch a conversation. For now, I've said at least three or four times that the behavioral issues, and even how they are resolved by the Committee, arise from content disputes and can't be solved without understanding and resolving the content issues. It can't be done the other way around; it's been tried and it doesn't work. And as long as you see the problem as people holding entrenched positions just needing to be shown how to work together, you don't understand much about what's going on here or how to fix it. Not that anyone else knows how to fix it either, without abandoning some of Misplaced Pages's most cherished ideas (the devaluation of expertise, the idea that if you leave things alone, they'll get better and better, the idea that no one is here for any reason other than to build a good encyclopedia, and all you have to do is assume good faith and all will be well). | |||
== Anyone home? == | |||
:::As long as the "entrenched positions" in the fringe areas are on one hand, people trying to make the article reflect the consensus of the best sources on the subject, and on the other hand, people determined (to the point of insisting on misperceiving policy, even to the point of warring on the policy pages to change policy to a position that is more favorable to their agenda) to get their favorite fringe stuff into the encyclopedia, then any attempt to help the two "sides" to work together to produce "policy compliant" content will either fail miserably or end up pushing the content in a fringe direction. Because what you're doing with this approach is setting up "NPOV" and "RS" as negotiable policies that can be compromised in the interest of peace. The quality of content will ''never'' be improved by such a compromise. I'm tired of saying the same thing again and again; you're not getting it. All the best, but unless you take me up on the suggestion to learn something about what editors in fringe areas have to deal with here before opining on how to fix it, I don't think we can have a productive conversation. Thanks for trying, though.] (]) 17:23, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
Are you still around, or reading this site at all? I was looking through some old discussions and smiling at some of your commentary, and I was wondering if you were gone for good or just laying low. Cheers. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 19:26, 3 January 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::P.S. It wouldn't have to be cold fusion, if you think that would be too stressful. There are dozens of articles you could choose from, where a neutral presentation of a topic is vehemently opposed by a never-ending supply of folks who are there to use the Misplaced Pages as a platform to promote their product/program. Generally it's about money; having your particular brand of snake oil recognized on Misplaced Pages gives legitimacy to the product/program and is seen as free advertising. The fringe theories noticeboard is a good place to find such articles, but they're everywhere.] (]) 17:43, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Ditto. -- ] <small>(])</small> 04:59, 16 May 2012 (UTC) | |||
==Dispute resolution survey== | |||
'''Woonpton:''' ''For now, I've said at least three or four times that the behavioral issues, and even how they are resolved by the Committee, arise from content disputes and can't be solved without understanding and resolving the content issues. It can't be done the other way around; it's been tried and it doesn't work. And as long as you see the problem as people holding entrenched positions just needing to be shown how to work together, you don't understand much about what's going on here or how to fix it.'' | |||
{| style="background-color: #CCFFFF; border: 4px solid #3399cc; width:100%" cellpadding="5" | |||
| ] | |||
'''Vassyana :''' ''any times I see the phrase "content dispute" raised, it's a matter ''involving'' content but that has behavior that extends well beyond a reasonable content disagreement.'' | |||
<big>'''Dispute Resolution – ''Survey Invite'''''</big> | |||
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'''Noroton :''' ''I see it the other way around: In long-running disputes, where parties find it too difficult to reach a compromise, the temptation is to charge your opponents with behavioral violations in order to rough them up so much that they'll go away (or get blocked or banned). Misplaced Pages's current set of policies and guidelines channels our energies toward that kind of gamesmanship because Misplaced Pages doesn't work well in large controversies. Since it's so difficult to reach broad consensus on these kinds of content disputes, the urge grows and grows to exaggerate a behavioral problem or egg on your opponents into bad behavior.'' | |||
Hello {{BASEPAGENAME}}. I am currently conducting a study on the dispute resolution processes on the English Misplaced Pages, in the hope that the results will help improve these processes in the future. Whether you have used dispute resolution a little or a lot, now we need to know about your experience. The survey takes around five minutes, and the information you provide will not be shared with third parties other than to assist in analyzing the results of the survey. No personally identifiable information will be released. | |||
So, which is the real issue: the behavioural problem that there is a determination to 'win' at any cost, or the content problem that there is only one 'right' answer? | |||
:What an odd, and if I might say so, perverse way to frame the issue. It would depend on the context, and you're misunderstanding me entirely if you think this is what I'm saying, that there is only one right answer and "my side" must win at any cost. This is not what I'm saying, for heavens' sake! And (since you keep coming back for more, I'll say it again!) it just shows you don't have enough familiarity with editing in fringe areas to be able to understand the problem, so you approach it as a problem of failure to compromise on both sides. More about that below.] (]) 18:02, 9 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I do feel I ''have'' to respond to this one. I'm asking which is the basic issue with a single editor. Consider a determined fringe POV-pusher: in terms of the problem to the encyclopedia, is the problem that s/he is determined to win and will do anything to do so (like use the civil strategy that appeared a while back)? Or, is the problem her or his belief that there is only one 'truth' as regards content? I would say the former, because it is hugeley disruptive. In an editor that will follow site norms and accept consensus, the latter can help to produce balanced content. I suggest that compromise is not possible with the former editor but it ''can'' (though not necessarily ''will'') be possible in the latter case. ] (]) 00:47, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I appreciate your coming at that again; my first response wasn't helpful. What I should have said is that I don't think it's a useful distinction, because (1) the effect on content is the same either way, and it's content that I'm concerned with, and (2) the really annoying fringe editors don't separate themselves neatly that way into one or the other. The person who is a determined POV pusher will also most often be the person who believes that their truth is the truth that needs to be in the encyclopedia (the truth that the static you hear on the radio is really your dead grandmother sending you , for example. I had to go find that because I couldn't remember what they called it, and am encouraged to see that that article really has improved remarkably since Martinphi was banned. So maybe I'm being too pessimistic about everything. If he had been banned for his endless POV-pushing, for editing policy pages to make policies more fringe-friendly, for all the ways in which he disrupted the encyclopedia, I'd feel more optimistic, but that would never have happened, unfortunately. He was banned for edit-warring to "out" Science Apologist, with whom he shared an undying enmity, and some administrator finally had enough and blocked him. I was relieved to see a fairly recent unblock request and review, where the consensus was he should stay blocked. Yes! But..I digress. As I was saying, the person who is a determined and aggressive POV-pusher is usually doing it ''because'' they believe their truth is the truth and needs to be in the encyclopedia, and they will do anything they have to do to get it in there and keep it in there. I had to smile at your idea that anyone who believes their truth is the truth that needs to be in the encyclopedia could be "helped to produce balanced content." I'd like to see you try that with a 9/11 "Truther." I keep giving you assignments, but only because some of the things you suggest seem so unrealistic to anyone who has been in the trenches, or even watching the trenches, in the fringe areas, it seems like you need to see how they work in practice before you assume you've got the right answer.] (]) 02:16, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''Noroton :''' ''One of the problems we have now is that the best game players in the largest, most protracted content disputes try to push their opponents into behavioral violations and immediately report those violations -- get rid of your opponent, win the "game".'' | |||
'''DGG :''' ''The problem Noroton sees of people in a dispute trying to taunt each other into conduct violations is very real, & I'd word it just as he does. I think we should encourage wider participation from those not involved in a particular dispute; our rules on canvassing are a little bit out of touch with reality. I see the problem though not as much in making a decision, but in achieving closure.'' | |||
I think we can agree Noroton and DGG are absolutely right about this one, and I can (almost) hear you saying that this behaviour is directed towards winning in the content dispute - and I agree with you. I'd also agree that editors like that need topic banning. However, to me the problem is not their belief in whatever topic is in question, it's in their determination to win WP presenting their "truth". I can work with someone who believes in cold fusion (say) so long as they recognise that their view is a minority perspective and that a genuinely balanced article must say so. That's why I see the problem with someone like Abd as a behavioural problem, not a content problem. A science advocate who was equally determined to eliminate any balance and make the cold fusion article a vehicle for ridicule presents just as large a behavioural problem, in my view, even though I may share a large amount of common ground about content. | |||
Does this make sense? People with entrenched positions ''can'' work together and achieve a decent and policy-compliant article provided they are willing to work together. When they aren't willing to work together, they need to be removed from the discussion. It is not necessary to restrict participation to editors with a single content position. What '''is''' necessary is to remove from participation the editors who are unwilling to behave in a manner consistent with productive development of content. ] (]) 07:28, 9 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
PS... I know that those with an agenda to advance are going to be intractable - they fall into the need-to-be-banned category. Maybe on the rest the problem is that I assume too much ]. ] (]) 07:31, 9 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Ed, I don't know what to say any more. I'm sure you're not being deliberately obtuse, so it must be that I'm not explaining myself clearly enough. But we are definitely not getting anywhere. It's as if you think that if you just say enough times that the whole problem is that both sides need to learn to work together, you'll finally open my eyes. Look, I get your point, I got it the first time. I just don't think it's terribly useful or relevant to the problem we're dealing with. | |||
'''Please click to participate.'''<br> | |||
:Yes, if there's a case where both sides can really be shown to be pushing a position that is incomplete by itself, then both sides need to compromise, as in the Israel/Palestine conflict. And if one side can be seen to be advancing an argument that's not complete in itself, then that side should be made to understand the concept of NPOV and weight and taught to compromise. However, I can't think of any case that has been brought against fringe advocates for insisting on a fringe position taking prominence in an article, although cases have been brought against science editors for doing so (see ID Cabal, or whatever it was called; in that case, though I can't say I followed it closely, it looked like some science editors got carried away with pushing a position that wasn't neutral, although the other side got carried away naming every science editor on the place as obviously "involved" with that "cabal," even those who had never edited that article or agreed with the stance that was taken there). I do agree with SV that it would be lovely if people on either side could write the article from an equally neutral viewpoint-- that after all is the original ideal vision of Misplaced Pages--and that does make sense with something like I/P. I think most science-literate folks (and especially someone like me, who has spent a career of writing, reading, and summarizing research reports) could write a neutral article on a fringe topic, and in fact that's what most science editors are trying to do, to produce an article that summarizes fairly the positions taken in reliable, academic sources. It's harder to imagine it the other way around, because many of the people on that "side" don't have any background in science, don't trust scientists, don't respect the findings of science, and in fact see "science" in terms of a conspiracy to suppress the truth (such as the truth that the World Trade Center towers were brought down by an explosion that was set by our government, or the truth that putting fluoride in the water is motivated by a government conspiracy to harm its citizens), so to be able to present science findings in a neutral manner, I think, would be difficult for many on that "side." And since reliable academic sources for the most part don't support their position, they tend to rely on blogs and advocacy websites and self-published tracts, and spend a lot of time arguing that such sources must be considered reliable sources for fringe topics. | |||
Many thanks in advance for your comments and thoughts. | |||
---- | |||
:At any rate, throughout the fringe science conflicts, the fringe "side" (if you insist on framing it as warring factions, although I don't think that's particularly helpful, myself) has managed to portray the "science" side (even when all the "science" side is trying to do is write the article to reflect the consensus of the best sources in the field) as "biased" or "pushing a POV." (This, I assume, is why Jehochman wrote that principle on the JzG/Abd workshop that said something to the effect that core policies, and those who try to enforce them, do not constitute a "POV.") I will never be convinced that in such a case, the science "side" should be forced to compromise NPOV or RS in order to show their willingness to work with the fringe folks. To me, that's the certain way to the destruction of the encyclopedia. (Let's see now, I've lost count. Is this the 8th or 9th time I've said that in this discussion without making a dent?) I'm not talking about ridicule; I've always said ridicule doesn't belong in an encyclopedia (if you have any doubt about that read my comments on the Fringe Science workshop page). I'm just talking about a neutral presentation of a topic, based on solid sources. And I'm not talking about insisting on "my" version of the truth either, I'm just talking about neutrality in the encyclopedic or scholarly sense, where the article reflects the available reliable sources. | |||
<small>You are receiving this invitation because you have had some activity in dispute resolution over the past year. For more information, please see the associated ]. <span style="font-family:Verdana;">] ] <sup>]</sup></span> 22:57, 5 April 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
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:A neutral presentation of a topic will never favor the fringe position or give it prominence (by definition) and that is why the fringe folks try to reinterpret and redefine NPOV, why they try to frame everything in terms of conduct on the other "side" in order to obscure the real problem, and why the encyclopedia is so royally f$&*'d up. This is why I had to go to a medical publication database to learn that the Bates method is not supported by research and is not held in high esteem by opthalmologists. I should have been able to learn that from the Misplaced Pages article. That was several months ago; I don't know what kind of shape that article is in now, but I do know that there are people making money from practicing the Bates method and from writing and selling books promoting it, and these people are never going to allow that topic to be presented neutrally, hence the repeated appearance of that article on the fringe theories noticeboard. So, show me how you can work with such people*, show me how if they're intractable to "working with you" you'll just see that they're banned, and how you'll be sure that the banned people don't come back as sockpuppets to continue to bias the article and harrass your efforts, and how you'll continue to deal with the steady influx of advocates from the same advocacy websites that come in to take their place, and do that for months and years, and then we'll talk. Okay?] (]) 18:02, 9 May 2009 (UTC) *here I'm not referring to Bates method advocates specifically, just a general class of users whose purpose is to promote a program or a product rather than to write a neutral encyclopedia. ] (]) 19:23, 9 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
FYI... ] ] (]) 22:54, 9 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Ed, thanks, it's already on my watchlist. Lotta politics going on here. I can pretty well predict how it will go, the way of Kirill's proposed "reliable sourcing panel"of last year (which I actually supported in theory, although I was skeptical of how it would work in practice if the wrong people got on the panel, but which was shot down in flames anyway, because the "community" didn't want ArbCom concerning themselves with content). If I think it's looking promising, I'll maybe add a comment. Not that my comments carry any weight, but hope springs eternal that with one brilliant comment one can turn the battleship around and get it headed in the right direction. :-) ] (]) 00:23, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
I'm glad you didn't mind my pointing it out to you. I don't know whether to say anything else, because I don't want to upset or offend you. I have responded to the "perverse" characterisation above, but will leave the rest unless you'd like a response. We agree on so much, it's frustrating and disappointing that I feel you aren't seeing our common ground. :( Take care. ] (]) 00:47, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Ed, I'm not upset or offended, just weary. If you have something new to say, then I'd be happy to hear it, but if you continue sounding that one note, that fixing the problem is just a matter of getting people in "entrenched positions" to learn to work together, my hair might catch on fire. We have no common ground there at all, so I wonder where our common ground could lie. I responded to your other comment above. Hope you've been continuing to follow the SV proposal; that's gone from dubious to hilarious with Coppertwig's proposal. I really can't see what you thought was so appealing about this proposal, or about rootology's either (which I haven't commented about but might have some comments if you're interested) especially for fringe science topics. But then you weren't here for Elonka. Interestingly, Elonka gained power and influence with ArbCom by coming up with a solution for the, yes! the Israel/Palestine conflict, and then she leveraged that into a working group applying her solution to all the ethnic conflicts in the world, and then she moved her one-woman operation over into the fringe science area, where she was adored by fringe editors and loathed by science editors. I don't know if her discretionary sanctions worked in ethnic conflict areas, but they were a disaster in fringe science. She made a virtue of ignorance about content issues (that's where I learned what a really bad idea that is); she really was proud to be able to say that she knew nothing about the content areas where she was pretty much managing articles and manhandling editors (mostly science-oriented editors) on her own. It wasn't a happy time in the fringe world for people wanting to see some neutrality in fringe articles. I don't know what happened to her, she just sort of disappeared, soon after ArbCom very gently admonished her for taking arbitration enforcement to mean she could do anything she wanted and no one could challenge or overturn her decisions. I don't know if she left because she was hurt by the admonishment, or if she just hasn't been around for other reasons; I hope to god she never comes back. But as far as her brilliant idea, I say the proof is in the pudding; if her solution to Israel/Palestine was so great, why is that conflict still raging a year later? If I seem cynical, it's just because I've seen these things come and go, ebb and flow. I used to get excited about every new proposal or arbitration or discussion that I thought would finally get people to see the underlying problem and do something about it; I no longer believe that's going to happen. So why am I still hanging around? Very good question. ] (]) 02:16, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
::P.S. "I can just see you saying" (well, if you can do it so can I) that science editors didn't like Elonka because they were all being disruptive and uncivil and needed to be sanctioned, so good on Elonka. While that might have been so in one or two cases, for the most part it had nothing to do with behavior per se; it was all about content. Elonka declared fringe articles, one by one, as "under discretionary sanctions" and then she applied whatever sanctions she thought necessary, in her little bubble of not understanding the content issues at all. A science editor reverting a non-sourced blatantly POV statement in the article would be considered "disruptive;" she instituted 1RR and even 0RR restrictions on some of these articles. Reverting was prohibited, in other words; the only way you could edit would be to change the fringe editors' edits slightly, in other words, the only edits allowed were edits that compromised neutrality. (I hope by now you can see why these compromise proposals make me foam at the mouth). The result was that fringe promoters could add as much cruft to articles as they liked, and it couldn't be reverted. She claimed the articles had "improved" after her intervention, and I'm sure by her criterion they had, because her criteria had nothing to do with neutrality or quality of the content; it was all about people not fighting. She never was willing to consider that the reason no one was fighting anymore was that neutral editors had pretty much abandoned the articles. Antelan and I analyzed the editing on one article and showed how the article had got longer but less neutral and how most editors had just stepped away from editing the article. You would probably think that's a good thing; I definitely do not think that driving science-literate editors away from fringe articles is a good idea by any definition that's meaningful for producing a quality encyclopedia. ] (]) 16:13, 10 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Hi... I either missed or forgot about having read this. I did look briefly into Elonka's efforts after you mentioned them, and agree they were unhelpful in the extreme. I am disappointed (and a little upset) that the image you have of me is as distorted as it appears to be. To be clear, 0RR is a dreadful idea on a science article precisely because scientific content must be accurate. Chasing or driving away science-literate editors is a poor outcome for quality encyclopedia content. Decent behaviour helps with collaborative editing - just as it does with any collaborative endevour - but some of the stuff that provokes mock outrage is trivial... and the mock outrage performances advancing a strategy for banning opponents warrant sanctions, not rewards. If there is ever to be a single editor supervising science articles (and I don't think that's a good idea at all) she or he *must* be a scientist, or they will not have a hope of recognising what is disruptive and what is POV-pushing. ] (]) 13:18, 31 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
== how to reign in the "subtle" assholes? == | |||
i came over here from your post on the an/i giano thread and read the above conversation. i am 'involved' in i/p pages and i think you see this correctly, although it may be more nefarious than you characterize it. hounding, goading, baiting, and worst of all, the wikilawyering against massive sources were the highlights of that case, but the only behavior chastised was edit warring. | |||
content, content, content. | |||
camera infiltrates the area to drum up !votes (even recently with the banning of ). misinformation from unreliable or tiny minority sources is allowed to stay in articles, whether i/p or science/fringe. reverting without enough teammates and cussing are the only things that will get you blocked. its a joke. | |||
this is a community with people who take the time to go over the history, timeline, diffs, logs, etc, etc. why is "subtle" gamesmanship tolerated across the board while an fbomb will get you blocked right away? and, again, where is the right place for this discussion - i'm still a little green. ](]) 18:56, 22 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:(Answer copied back from untwirl talk) | |||
:Hi untwirl, thanks for your message on my talk. I never know where is best to respond to talk page messages; some people like to keep them together, some don't care; I go back and forth. | |||
:I took the time to look over some of your contributions, and liked your editing and your manner in discussing edits. And I learned something. I've never actually looked into those articles and didn't follow that arbitration very closely, since it's not an area of concern to me (I mean, not as far as Misplaced Pages goes) but looking a little further, I think I was wrong about i/p and other geopolitical and ethnic disputes being somehow different from science/fringe disputes and needing a different kind of resolution. I assumed that in those areas, it was a matter of two groups of good-faith editors with strong beliefs about something having trouble finding the middle ground. But it looks just like more of the same thing; you're right. It's the people who are trying to maintain encyclopedic content vs those whose interest would be served if the content were biased in a particular direction. I don't know if you've been following the Macedonia2 RfArb; it's very distressing to see how that's going. | |||
:I have been thinking about posting a comment to the RfC that ArbCom opened to discuss the problem of how to deal with content disputes; I may or may not come up with a coherent statement before the RfC closes. | |||
:About subtle incivility: it's a big problem, but raising consciousness among people who don't see it as a problem is a real uphill battle. You saw how little discussion followed when the question (where do we discuss this) was raised. I don't know if you're aware of the page on civil POV pushing but that was one place where it did get some discussion, although I don't think it generated much interest in the community as a whole. I don't know the answer, but it's good to know someone else that is concerned with the question. Woonpton (talk) 23:49, 22 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Reply at my talk page == | |||
I left a question for you at my talk page. Regards, ] <sup>]</sup> 00:39, 24 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Invitation == | |||
Hi, Woonpton. I added a ] to Abd's userspace essay ], and I would be interested in your comments on it. I invite you to participate in discussion on ]. <span style="color:Purple; font-size:11pt;">☺</span>] (]) 13:11, 30 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Well, hmm. I'm no doubt honored by the invitation but puzzled as to why it would be extended to me, since I don't edit Misplaced Pages, and have merely made a few comments in metadiscussion as an outside observer. To tell the truth, I'd rather have root canal work done than read another word of Abd's prose and/or get myself caught in an endless back and forth involving mushrooming amounts of obfuscating and tendentious verbiage, which appears to be the only kind of "discussion" that is possible with Abd. But at least I seem to be in good company in the invitation. MastCell is the most evenhanded person I've seen in more than a year of watching Misplaced Pages; I respect him greatly and trust his judgment implicitly. To be mentioned on a short list with him is the highest praise I can think of. So, thanks, but no thanks. ] (]) 19:31, 30 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
::re:. I think you may be laboring under the persistent influence of some snap judgments. But I don't want to harass you. Care to pick the most important thing you wrote there, and discuss it? I'll try to be brief. Otherwise, please, don't go around making wild charges based on superficial appearances. One example: sure, lots of people wrote "sock puppet," for what were really serial accounts. But nobody was blocked for sock puppetry, per se. The editor, while blocked, made some edits, generally non-disruptive except for being block evasion, those we do call "socks," but the original blocks had nothing to do with sock puppetry, this was an editor confining himself to a single account, he just kept changing his account name each time, openly (except once he didn't declare it, but didn't conceal it, either, it was totally obvious). Thanks. --] (]) 18:57, 31 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm prepared to provide dozens of diffs to back up every single thing I've said; I have pages and pages of them. No, these aren't wild charges; they are supported by evidence and a careful reading of the record. I have no interest whatever in "discussing" it with you, I've read the same arguments a thousand times in all the miles of verbiage you've written on the matter. The same things you've said above, the same things you said on MastCell's page, are the same things you said to everyone at the time. No one was buying it then, and I'm not buying it now; the facts speak for themselves. There are some wild charges that I could make about this, but they couldn't be proven, they are only speculations, so I have kept them to myself. I was simply suggesting that my friend might investigate the matter himself and draw his own conclusions; that's hardly making wild charges. I'm not interested in getting into a fight with you; I was just discussing some of my thoughts about Misplaced Pages with a friend. As I said, what I have is way too much for MastCell's talk page, although if you insist, I may post a small fraction of it there anyway, since you've insisted on challenging me on it. I'll think about it. | |||
== You are missed == | |||
:::In the meantime, my advice to you would be to let sleeping dogs lie. That proposal and its surrounding disruption hardly show you in a good light; I wouldn't think you'd want to be calling attention to it or continuing to defend your actions there; that you are still doing that shows that you haven't learned much from the experience. I'd prefer that you stay off my talk page; if you post here again I will delete without reading. I have read, a hundred, a thousand, times, everything you have to say. It's not convincing to me. Saying what you want me to believe ten more times is not going to persuade me; it's just going to increase my aversion. Thank you for respecting my right to interpret information as I see it; I'm actually known to be very good at that. Thank you. ] (]) 19:24, 31 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
When you stopped editing, Misplaced Pages got a little less intelligent and a little less fun. The fact that Misplaced Pages can't retain smart, incisive, clever people like you is the reason I think the project is ultimately doomed. Anyhow, hope you're out there and doing well. Cheers. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 03:33, 11 September 2013 (UTC) | |||
See cold fusion, | |||
: You are missed! :-) <span style="color:#666;">– ]]</span> 08:22, 4 January 2014 (UTC) | |||
== Cold fusion mediation == | |||
::I just had cause to look at some very old discussions, and was reminded of your contributions. You are remembered, even after a long absence, and I too miss your contributions. And, for the record, you were right and I was wrong – Abd was a much bigger problem than I recognised at the time. Hopefully you helped me to learn, and I am thankful. ] (]) 09:53, 16 December 2016 (UTC) | |||
I have been asked to mediate the content dispute regarding ]. I have set up a separate page for this mediation ''']'''. You have been identified as one of the involved parties. Please read through the material I have presented there. Thank you. --'''] · ]''' 19:23, 5 June 2009 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 12:44, 28 February 2023
Welcome!
"The more limited your understanding of science, the more scientists resemble masters of the occult, and the more paranormal phenomena seem likely to reflect undiscovered scientific truths." -- Wendy Kaminer
"The annals of science are littered with the names of once-celebrated scientists whose wishful thinking forced them to jump into the fringe. If their pet theories become resistant to contrary evidence, if their logic resists criticism, if their peers suspect that they have fudged results, they are expelled from the scientific community. Pons and Fleischman were at the brink days after they went public. Almost immediately they were told that their peak was in the wrong place. They had to make a decision: retreat or press on despite the damaging evidence. In the end, they leaped into the void and will never rejoin the ranks of mainstream scientists." --Charles Seife Sun in a Bottle: the strange history of fusion and the science of wishful thinking. Viking, 2008.
"The wishful thinking about fusion extends far beyond a handful of shunned individuals. Individuals ... do little damage once they are excluded from the community. The real danger comes not from these individuals but from the wishful thinking at the very core of the scientist . This, and not a threat from a handful of renegades, is what makes the dream of fusion energy so dangerous. --also Seife
"The burden of proof, as always in science, is on those who claim extraordinary things. It is their responsibility to perform an experiment so well that it forces the scientific community to accept the results."
Thank you
Thank you. Vassyana (talk) 14:09, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- Where, and how, did you do it? Finell (Talk) 22:33, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- He must be referring to my comments on Jehochman's talk, since that's the only place I've ever had even a brief encounter with him.Woonpton (talk) 23:18, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
Hi
Back again. I was reading through the cold fusion case. How are you? This time I am really going to make an effort. The Rationalist (talk) 21:18, 9 October 2009 (UTC)
- Hey, welcome back.Woonpton (talk) 15:22, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
Randy
I'm going to stun you further, I've never heard of Boise either! Now go and have a sit down, I realise this will have been a shock to you. :) Tim Vickers (talk) 20:41, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- (fanning self) Bring the smelling salts, Martha, I'm feeling faint...Woonpton (talk) 22:05, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
Randy from Boise at ANI
Would you mind putting your comments at the ANI thread about Randy from Boise in a new section? Give it a suitable title as a level 2 header. You can refer back to the previous section, and I know you edit conflicted (probably with me), but I'm trying to focus some of the discussion there into separate threads, rather than have it continue on and on. And yes, I was surprised as well. I had heard of the phrase Randy from Boise many times before, but if you search for the phrase within Misplaced Pages, you will find it is not that widely known. There are probably many similar phrases that others would be surprised that not everyone has heard of. Misplaced Pages is a very big place, after all. Carcharoth (talk) 20:46, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- Just ==Randy from Boise== will do the trick. It will archive separately, even if no-one replies to it. You could remove it as well. What I'm trying to avoid is a new conversation developing there, which risks the whole thread restarting. Carcharoth (talk) 21:14, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- As the person who started the page WP:RANDY, I don't know whether to be honored or ashamed. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 00:34, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- Well, since I didn't know about that page, I don't think you can take the credit or the blame for my understanding of the term, but of course I can't speak for Giano, where he picked it up from. I did learn something from that page you started, though; I hadn't seen the original quote from Wired that the term came from; that's really great. I've just heard the term "Randy from Boise" here and there and put together for myself who that guy is, and gone on to use the term, without knowing its etymology and historical context. So thanks, Woonpton (talk) 01:12, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- Just for my education, do the two words rhyme, eg (Randy, boy-se) or do you pronounce it "bO-I-se"? Tim Vickers (talk) 07:58, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- I've heard Boise pronounced both Boy-see and Boy-zee, stress on the first syllable (IPA: /'b$₧₩♭æ/ or /'bфӡת₤Ð/). I started to say Boy-c or Boy-z, but realized you could take the latter as Boy-zed which probably is not an accepted pronunciation. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 08:24, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- I'd heard of this but didn't know the history behind it either so thanks Boris. I thought that whole thread was strange but interesting in a weird kind of way. :) Woonpton, good move removing your comment. I really don't think we've heard the last of it though, at least that's how the ending sounded. Take care all, --CrohnieGal 10:16, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- I've heard Boise pronounced both Boy-see and Boy-zee, stress on the first syllable (IPA: /'b$₧₩♭æ/ or /'bфӡת₤Ð/). I started to say Boy-c or Boy-z, but realized you could take the latter as Boy-zed which probably is not an accepted pronunciation. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 08:24, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
- As the person who started the page WP:RANDY, I don't know whether to be honored or ashamed. Short Brigade Harvester Boris (talk) 00:34, 14 November 2009 (UTC)
TM
What you remmoved was a direct cut and paste from the paper pg.148 which is why there was quotes around it "Direct meta-analyses showed that compared to HE, TM® did not produce significantly greater benefits on blood pressure (SBP and DBP), heart rate, TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, body weight, dietary intake, physical activity, measures of stress, anger, and self-efficacy. A subgroup analysis by study duration showed short-term significant improvement in SBP with TM®, but not over the long-term. When compared to PMR, TM® produced significantly greater benefits in SBP and DBP. When RR was compared to BF, RR did not produce significantly greater benefits on blood pressure (SBP and DBP)." Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 20:07, 11 February 2010 (UTC)
- You mistake my edit. I removed one of the sentences listing the nonsignificant HE analyses because I didn't think they needed to be listed twice in the same paragraph, in other words I removed one of the citations to the HE analyses as being redundant. If you'd prefer to replace the direct quote and remove the paraphrase, I have no objection, but they shouldn't both be in there.
The other sentence I removed didn't accurately reflect the subanalysis (the result of the subanalysis was nonsignificant) so I took it out. Will explain further on the article talk. Woonpton (talk) 20:15, 11 February 2010 (UTC)
- However you left the sentence "When compared to PMR, TM® produced significantly greater benefits in SBP and DBP." Which is now out of context... So something that was baried deep in the text seems to have as great of weight as the executive summary conclusion. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 20:18, 11 February 2010 (UTC)
- Okay, I see what the problem is. If they are really referring to the HE analyses, as the context implies, then they've misrepresented their own research in the summary, since none of the subanalyses in the HE meta-analyses were significant. There was a subanalysis in a different meta-analysis (TM vs NT) but that one went the other direction: the meta-analysis was nonsignificant but when they dropped out the short term trial and did the analysis only on the two longer term studies, then there was a significant effect, but only for DBP, not SBP. So whichever analysis they meant, the statement in the article, whether a direct quote or not, is inaccurate with respect to the actual analysis. I agree, the PMR thing looks weird stuck on the end there. I take it you would prefer to just reinstate the whole quoted paragraph from the results summary. Go ahead. While I feel helpless to fix most of what's wrong with these articles, I felt fine about removing an inaccuracy, but if the inaccuracy is a direct quote from the study, then I guess there's nothing I can do. I would guess, from reading both the abstract and this research summary, that the abstracts and summaries weren't written by the researchers themselves but by someone less familiar with the data (as a researcher who has done work for the federal government, this doesn't surprise me). Woonpton (talk) 20:39, 11 February 2010 (UTC)
Best wishes
Sorry to read at ArbCom about your recent health issues. Hope things turn out well. Fladrif (talk) 17:09, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
You're very welcome
I had previously looked, but for some reason had not, in fact, discovered until just today that the AHRQ meta-analysis had been discussed three different times before the edit-war episode in Feb 2009 when I first got involved in the substance of these articles, and that, a full year earlier, another editor had suggested perfectly appropriate language to address the meta-analysis and been run off by TimidGuy. I assumed that someone had to have brought it up before 2009 because its conclusions were widely reported in the press, but somehow I never found it in the archives until now. Now knowing that this was something already under discussion for a full year exposes the "we just wanted to discuss it first" argument for what it is. Fladrif (talk) 22:01, 18 March 2010 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Transcendental Meditation movement
This arbitration case has been closed and the final decision is available at the link above. The following is a summary of the remedies enacted:
- All editors who are party to this case are instructed to read the principles, to review their own past conduct in the light of them, and if necessary to modify their future conduct to ensure full compliance with them.
- Editors are reminded that when editing in controversial subject areas it is all the more important to comply with Misplaced Pages policies. In addition, editors who find it difficult to edit a particular article or topic from a neutral point of view and to adhere to other Misplaced Pages policies are counselled that they may sometimes need or wish to step away temporarily from that article or subject area, and to find other related but less controversial topics in which to edit.
- Any uninvolved administrator may, in his or her own discretion, impose sanctions on any editor editing Transcendental meditation or other articles concerning Transcendental meditation and related biographies of living people, broadly defined, if, after a warning, that editor repeatedly or seriously violates the behavioural standards or editorial processes of Misplaced Pages in connection with these articles.
- Uninvolved administrators are invited to monitor the articles in the area of conflict to enforce compliance by editors with, in particular, the principles outlined in this case. Enforcing administrators are instructed to focus on fresh and clear-cut matters arising after the closure of this case rather than on revisiting historical allegations.
- From time to time, the conduct of editors within the topic may be re-appraised by any member of the Arbitration Committee and, by motion of the Arbitration Committee, further remedies may be summarily applied to specific editors who have failed to conduct themselves in an appropriate manner.
- User:Fladrif is (i) strongly admonished for incivility, personal attacks, and assumptions of bad faith; and (ii) subject to an editing restriction for one year. Should he make any edits which are judged by an administrator to be uncivil, personal attacks, or assumptions of bad faith, he may be briefly blocked, up to a week in the event of repeated violations. After three blocks, the maximum block shall increase to one month.
- Should any user subject to a restriction or topic ban in this case violate that restriction or ban, that user may be blocked, initially for up to one month, and then with blocks increasing in duration to a maximum of one year, with the topic ban clock restarting at the end of the block.
On behalf of the Arbitration Committee, ~ Amory (u • t • c) 18:31, 6 June 2010 (UTC)
Statistics
You know, at one point during the case I considered offering a free copy of How to Lie with Statistics to any member of the Committee who was seriously considering the statistical evidence provided. But then I thought it wouldn't go over very well. Anyhow, I appreciate your voice of sanity, although since you seem to have some sort of real-life expertise I feel instinctively that I should distrust you... :P MastCell 22:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
- And rightly so; we don't want any of that riffraff 'round here. :P Thanks, I appreciated that. Woonpton (talk)
Ping
Hi stranger, you have email. :) I hope I hear from you, --CrohnieGal 22:53, 28 August 2010 (UTC)
Use of the wikistalk tool for determining cooperation or collaboration among editors
Reviewing this, Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Climate change exaggeration there's something very interesting about the flocking of the user accounts who voted keep here. If you run a wikistalk on the 10 or so users, you'll find a few patterns emerge. It also looks like some users have a closer working relationship than would otherwise appear. Viriditas (talk) 02:37, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- That debate is six months old....--*Kat* (talk) 02:42, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- What kind of pattern? Coke or tea? -- Petri Krohn (talk) 04:41, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Here is a working link to the list I compiled. – I left out the four who had the lowes edit counts or who did not show any correlation. This left 9 so I added Mark Nutley's today's closest supporter to the list (number 10). There is a high level of correlation, even outside climate chance. The cooperation however does not seem to be politically driven. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 05:08, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Um -- 1 case of 6/10 and 5 cases of 5/10? Sorry -- Random chance at work. I went to the UT overlap for them to save time as well. 1 solitary case of 7/10 (to this page, in fact), 4 cases of 6/10. Pretty much in line with random chance. A lot less than found for other assortments, to be sure. Collect (talk) 10:19, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Exactly as I already said further down the page it shows nothing. I don't think there is anything particularly random about it though. If you start with editors voting in the same way on a similar article you will expect several non-random ties to come in to play. These will be so complex that any analysis based on random correlations is inherently flawed. Polargeo (talk) 10:27, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Also note that I did not !vote on the article cited. Period. At all. Nada. No connection. Collect (talk) 10:25, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I agree. Why add you into the mix? Polargeo (talk) 10:28, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Petri has now run into me on (I think) three quite disparate pages, and has specifically announced a combative attitude about procedures at User_talk:Wgfinley. Somehow I think announcing a deliberate decision to "wiki-lawyer" on that page is going to benefit him much <g>. Cheers. Collect (talk) 10:35, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I really wish you wouldn't act like that. PK's comment is clearly intended a a humourous way of saying "discuss in detail". If everyone has to avoid anything vaguely amusing for fear of being misquoted by the Humour Police elsewhere, wiki will be the poorer William M. Connolley (talk) 10:57, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I added Collect to the list because he seems to have a particular correlation with Mark Nutley. I have pumped into him and Mark Nutley in three separate context strangely related to climate change advocacy. I wanted to see if any of the others have this interest in coke, tea and caviar. The result is that they did not correlate. From this data we cannot extract signs of Organised Political Editing on Misplaced Pages. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 14:51, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Related to Climate Change??? Um - how in heaven's name does Mass killings under Communist regimes remotely connect to climate change? Indeed, the three of us overlap on a total of two articles. Total. And this is some sort of major coincidence? BTW, I do not consider Koch Industries to be especially related to climate change, and a teesny bit unrelated to mass killings as well. Petri -- complaining about an overlap of a total of two articles is outre at best. Collect (talk) 15:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- As you see above, I am not complaining. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 15:18, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Related to Climate Change??? Um - how in heaven's name does Mass killings under Communist regimes remotely connect to climate change? Indeed, the three of us overlap on a total of two articles. Total. And this is some sort of major coincidence? BTW, I do not consider Koch Industries to be especially related to climate change, and a teesny bit unrelated to mass killings as well. Petri -- complaining about an overlap of a total of two articles is outre at best. Collect (talk) 15:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Petri has now run into me on (I think) three quite disparate pages, and has specifically announced a combative attitude about procedures at User_talk:Wgfinley. Somehow I think announcing a deliberate decision to "wiki-lawyer" on that page is going to benefit him much <g>. Cheers. Collect (talk) 10:35, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I agree. Why add you into the mix? Polargeo (talk) 10:28, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Um -- 1 case of 6/10 and 5 cases of 5/10? Sorry -- Random chance at work. I went to the UT overlap for them to save time as well. 1 solitary case of 7/10 (to this page, in fact), 4 cases of 6/10. Pretty much in line with random chance. A lot less than found for other assortments, to be sure. Collect (talk) 10:19, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Here is a working link to the list I compiled. – I left out the four who had the lowes edit counts or who did not show any correlation. This left 9 so I added Mark Nutley's today's closest supporter to the list (number 10). There is a high level of correlation, even outside climate chance. The cooperation however does not seem to be politically driven. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 05:08, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Please do not describe wikistalk results using words like "cooperation" or "coordination" or phrases like "close working relationship" or "high level of correlation;" such interpretations are unwarranted. I didn't take time to count up the results, but the link Petri gave doesn't me show much of anything on a quick run through. The vast number of overlaps are 2/10; when you have ten things, there are a lot of combinations of two, but the fact that a lot of pairs of two taken from this group of ten editors have edited articles in common doesn't mean diddly; the only thing that jumps out is that that Nyttend, Tillman and Drmies share a broad interest in geographic places in the US, although not all three of them are interested in the same places; different pairs of the three have edited different place articles. There are very few articles that even 4 or 5 of them have ever edited in common and only one I saw that 6 have edited in common (and remember, all wikistalk tells you is that these people have each edited this article one or more times in its history. It doesn't mean that they have edited it at the same time, much less that they have edited it in a coordinated or cooperative way) and they seem to be mostly climate change related, as you might expect from a group of editors voting on a climate-related AfD. The degree of overlap is so small that to call it a "high level of correlation" is misleading, to say the least. Woonpton (talk) 06:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- That is not correct. The problem is with Petri Krohn's query, which failed to search for all namespaces, and left out one or two users who voted keep. The link he posted does not include these results. Viriditas (talk) 07:47, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Well I don't see anything particularly astonishing in wikistalk relating to that AfDs keep voters. Just a few misguided regulars, a banned user and a sockpupetteer. Exactly what I would expect. Polargeo (talk) 08:34, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- After seeing that list, I edited a few of the articles on it just to add a little fat to the fire. Fell Gleaming 11:04, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- And now a user that should be clearly topic banned then Polargeo (talk) 12:05, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Why Poleargo, surely you didn't take that comment seriously? Here's a quarter; go buy yourself a sense of humor. Fell Gleaming 13:53, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- That was my sense of humour. I can't believe you missed it. Polargeo (talk) 13:59, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Why Poleargo, surely you didn't take that comment seriously? Here's a quarter; go buy yourself a sense of humor. Fell Gleaming 13:53, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- And now a user that should be clearly topic banned then Polargeo (talk) 12:05, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- After seeing that list, I edited a few of the articles on it just to add a little fat to the fire. Fell Gleaming 11:04, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
I'm not used to reading wikistalk results. I can't see anything very obvious in the list (Nyttend is a new name), other than a lot of 2/10 with Nyttend and Tillman. Is that what I'm supposed to see? William M. Connolley (talk) 08:52, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I don't think there is anything there at all. Polargeo (talk) 09:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I can't say I know exactly what's there, but it does establish relationships between editors. I'm looking at this and User:Joepnl/Vault/Climate change exaggeration, which I wasn't aware of until now. Viriditas (talk) 10:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- No still nothing. Polargeo (talk) 10:15, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- I can't say I know exactly what's there, but it does establish relationships between editors. I'm looking at this and User:Joepnl/Vault/Climate change exaggeration, which I wasn't aware of until now. Viriditas (talk) 10:06, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
@Viriditas: I can't say I know exactly what's there, but it does establish relationships between editors. No, it does nothing of the sort. I find it rather surprising (although I guess I shouldn't be surprised any more by anything that happens on this project) that someone who is so apparently concerned about a political campaign to discredit science would be so willing to take a pseudoscientific (or maybe I should call it pseudostatistical, to be more precise) approach to establishing relationships. I suppose, then, that Viriditas endorses the use of wikistalk results introduced as evidence in the CC case to establish the existence of a coordinated pro-science "bloc" on climate change pages? Those results, while showing much more overlap than these do, were no more conclusive in showing a degree of cooperation or coordination among editors than these are, as I demonstrated on the PD talk page. And as I also pointed out on the same page, groups of SPAs who have actually been shown to have worked in concert to promote a single-purpose agenda on Misplaced Pages, tend to score very low on this tool, and groups of editors who are not working together, but who have been around a while and edit a lot and in a lot of different areas, tend to have a much higher degree of overlap with each other.
@Collect: Pretty much in line with random chance. As I pointed out to you elsewhere, the degree of departure from random chance is a statistical concept that must be established by a statistical test in order for the statement to have any meaning. The wikistalk tool does not provide a statistical test, so there appears to be no basis for these emphatic statements about how consistent something is with "random chance." You stated on the case pages that there was a "significant difference" between the overlap among six arbitrators (27 user talk pages in common) and the overlap among six pro-science editors on climate change articles (29 user talk pages in common). From this statement, one can assume that in your scheme of "statistical reasoning," in a group of six editors, two user talk pages in common would have to be considered a significant departure from "random chance." (this follows logically from your assertion that a difference of two--29 vs 27-- is "significant.") Extending that logic, one would have to consider that if two pages in common is a significant departure from "random chance" for a group of six editors, then one page in common among a group of ten editors (as shown on Viriditas' wikistalk link), which is much less probable by chance than a page in common among a group of six editors, could well also be a significant departure from chance. The point I'm trying to make is that this whole line of reasoning is simply without any statistical foundation, a house built on sand, and no one should draw any conclusions about degree of cooperation among editors, one way or the other, from using this tool. Woonpton (talk) 16:15, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- Empirical data from 300 editors taken 6 at a time establishes a pretty good basis for determining "random chance." Ask a math professor how much data is involved in 300 people taken six at a time seeking to maximize amount of overlap - and where said empirical data never got to 15 pages where all 6 people edited out of all the empirical observations (and only occurred once in all those observations), whether amounts much greater than 15 would be non-random. Collect (talk) 01:10, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
- Well, no, I don't need to "ask a math professor" I am (or have been before I retired), a statistics professor, and you are entirely missing my point. The number of samples you analyzed to draw your conclusions becomes quite irrelevant if the conclusions are shown to be flawed, and when I showed that a group of disparate editors, obviously not editing in concert with each other, yielded an even higher number of pages in common than the group of editors that you identified as "extraordinarily cohesive," and that a group od editors known to have edited in a coordinated fashion to push a POV in a topic area scored very low on this purported measure of cooperation, the game was up. Whatever this tool might measure, if anything, it's not cooperation or working relationships among editors.
- Empirical data from 300 editors taken 6 at a time establishes a pretty good basis for determining "random chance." Ask a math professor how much data is involved in 300 people taken six at a time seeking to maximize amount of overlap - and where said empirical data never got to 15 pages where all 6 people edited out of all the empirical observations (and only occurred once in all those observations), whether amounts much greater than 15 would be non-random. Collect (talk) 01:10, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
- I spent some time this afternoon running combinations of myself with various other editors; since I know whether I have a working relationship with these other editors, that knowledge serves as a check to evaluate the usefulness of the tool for determining whether people have a working relationship. What I found was interesting; I found that when I ran myself in a group of people with whom I share a scientific background and a similar view of the goals of the project and concerns about whether those goals will be achieved, but with whom I have not actually edited or even discussed specific articles, I found that the group of the four of us exhibited a high degree of "cohesiveness;" specifically there were 25 pages that the four of us had edited in common, and in "pairwise comparisons" I had 121 pages in common with Short Brigade Harvester Boris, 60 in common with MastCell, and 56 in common with Science Apologist, even though I've never edited with any of them, except for a very brief encounter with Science Apologist on What the Bleep Do We Know, in which we disagreed rather strongly. So it's definitely not cooperative or coordinated editing that this tool measures. In this case, it seems to measure nothing but our independently similar interests and views, since for all intents and purposes we've never edited in the same topic areas. And at the same time, I found that when I analyzed a group of people with whom I've had a fairly close working relationship editing articles together, I got a much lower number of shared pages. And when I ran myself with people with whom I have not only never edited, but have never even encountered on discussion or policy pages, and as far as I know do not share interests or views with me (SlimVirgin, Lar) I got numbers similar to the numbers I got when I ran the group of people I did have a working relationship with. In other words, this tool does not validly serve its purported purpose of identifying working relationships among editors, since it doesn't discriminate between editors who work together and editors who don't work together.
- Woonpton, the tool most certainly establishes relationships between editors, and this is not in any dispute. You appear to be very confused on this point. Anyone can use this tool to create an entity-relationship model, and we used to have a tool (can't find it at the moment) that created these models based on RfA data, showing relationships by nomination. Beyond that, you appear to enjoy engaging in fantasy and fighting with strawmen, with statements like "I suppose, then, that Viriditas endorses the use of wikistalk results introduced as evidence in the CC case to establish the existence of a coordinated pro-science "bloc" on climate change pages". I've said nothing like that. I've said that it establishes relationships between editors, and your reply, "it does nothing of the sort" is wrong. Along these lines, I would encourage someone, anyone, to model the relationships of participating editors in the current arbcom case and analyze them closely. Viriditas (talk) 21:14, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
- No, I am not confused, in the least. This tool does not establish relationships between editors; the idea that it does is in dispute; I am disputing it, and even if all 12 million registered editors of Misplaced Pages were laboring under the misconception that the tool establishes relationships between editors, that wouldn't make the idea any more valid. All the tool does is indicate pages which various combinations of the group of editors in question have each edited even once, at any time in the page's history. The edits don't even have to be in the same year, much less the same discussion (if a talk page) or the same paragraph (if an article). To infer that these adjacencies establish a relationship, much less a "close working relationship" between editors is simply not warranted, and I've posted enough counterexamples to make it clear empirically that such an inference isn't warranted.
- I'm not sure you understand what a straw man argument is; I certainly wasn't making one when I said that if you believe that wikistalk "establishes relationships" among editors, then it follows logically that you would have endorsed the wikistalk analysis that was offered in evidence on the CC case, purporting to establish statistically that "pro-science" editors were editing in a coordinated bloc. I was simply wondering whether you did or did not endorse that analysis. Woonpton (talk) 12:56, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
- We have two users, Woonpton and Viriditas. We want to find articles where only those two editors have both edited. Here is a link to wikistalk. Please note the drop-down list allowing the user to choose from 10 namespaces and their talk pages. (Please disregard the "summary" and "thread" namespaces for now, as that refers to the LiquidThreads MediaWiki extension currently under development.) Default search is set to the default namespace, Main. A check box appears to the right, allowing one to search through all namespaces. Choose your namespace and enter up to ten users. An explanation of the results can be found here. As an example, I chose all namespaces and entered in two users, "Viriditas" and "Woonpton". Here are the results. All the tool does, is show which pages were edited by you and I. The results are reliable, and we can compare them with another tool. Here is the same query made at Intersect Contribs. The results are identical. Viriditas (talk) 00:26, 10 September 2010 (UTC)
- I'm not sure you understand what a straw man argument is; I certainly wasn't making one when I said that if you believe that wikistalk "establishes relationships" among editors, then it follows logically that you would have endorsed the wikistalk analysis that was offered in evidence on the CC case, purporting to establish statistically that "pro-science" editors were editing in a coordinated bloc. I was simply wondering whether you did or did not endorse that analysis. Woonpton (talk) 12:56, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
- Actually, I finally realized what happened, after running several different combinations to try to identify the source of the discrepancy. I was running the thing in two different tabs and somehow in one of the tabs the "all" button got unchecked, so it was only counting user talk pages in one tab and "all" in the other one. So I have struck my accusation of unreliability for the tool; it does apparently reliably count what it counts, the pages that have been edited in common. As far as I know, this thread is the first time we've ever crossed paths, so the fact that we have edited 24 pages in common says nothing at all about a working relationship between us, which is one of the points I've been trying to make. Woonpton (talk) 07:40, 10 September 2010 (UTC)
- The tools give us the results, but the interpretation of the relationship is up to us. Let's be precise: Based on the intersection, we've only edited one article in the main namespace together, namely Three strikes law. Looking closer at these edits, beginning with myself, the edit history shows that I made one cleanup edit in March 2005 which brought the article into compliance with MOS:HEAD. I made a second maintenance edit in May 2006 consisting of recent changes/watchlist vandalism patrol. So, I made two cleanup/maintenance edits having little if any impact on the overall presentation of the content. There's nothing interesting or controversial about these edits, and they could have been made by anyone. Now, let us look at your edit. In May 2008, you deleted content with the edit summary, "rm unsourced (OR) graph". You removed a graph, File:CaliforniaCrimeIndex.png that you claimed was original research. The graph was sourced to this reference which appears to originate from data by an author named Mike Reynolds, who published the book, Three Strikes and You're Out (1996) after his daughter was murdered. Regardless of the merits of your edits, it is clear that they were not routine cleanup or maintenance. Therefore, the relationship between our two edits is very weak and insignificant. If, however, I had made the same reversion of what I deemed to be OR, or made a series of edits removing content from anti-crime activist Mike Reynolds from the article, the relationship between our edits would be a bit stronger. Looking at the editors who voted to keep at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Climate change exaggeration, we see a record of strong coordination and support between each other, on many different articles, far and above routine cleanup and maintenance. The simplest explanation for this instance of coordination is votestacking, and this observation was made by User:StuartH. We see similar behavior on the recent arbcom case, where the same set of editors flocked to support GregJackP's disputed edits, while the overwhelming majority of uninvolved editors did not. We also see this flocking on various AfD's and RfC's, indicating that this editing behavior cannot be classified as random, as the evidence suggests a strong working relationship over time, devoted solely to the topic of climate change, and more importantly, a working relationship that seeks to advocate for the minority POV of climate change denial. The fact that such a large number of editors are working together to promote a minority POV forces one to look closer into this phenomenon, and the relationships which emerge after analyzing the intersection of editorial contributions to common articles. Viriditas (talk) 03:20, 11 September 2010 (UTC)
- The tools give us the results, but the interpretation of the relationship is up to us. This shows that I'm not making a dent, and what's more, that we're not even speaking the same language. As a statistician, the word "relationship" has a specific meaning to me; the wikistalk tool does not establish relationship in any sense that's meaningful to me. Broadly speaking, you could say there are three degrees of "relationship" between things. First, there are random events, or "noise," in which there's no statistically discernable relationship between things. Then there are things that have been established through statistical testing to be related, associated, or correlated (in fact, the whole purpose and business of statistics is to separate relationship from randomness). Finally, determinations of causality can sometimes be made between things that are statistically associated, by the use of further careful experimental design and statistical analysis. In the quoted sentence, and indeed in this whole discussion, the three levels have been conflated to an alarming degree.
- The tools give us the results, but the interpretation of the relationship is up to us. Let's be precise: Based on the intersection, we've only edited one article in the main namespace together, namely Three strikes law. Looking closer at these edits, beginning with myself, the edit history shows that I made one cleanup edit in March 2005 which brought the article into compliance with MOS:HEAD. I made a second maintenance edit in May 2006 consisting of recent changes/watchlist vandalism patrol. So, I made two cleanup/maintenance edits having little if any impact on the overall presentation of the content. There's nothing interesting or controversial about these edits, and they could have been made by anyone. Now, let us look at your edit. In May 2008, you deleted content with the edit summary, "rm unsourced (OR) graph". You removed a graph, File:CaliforniaCrimeIndex.png that you claimed was original research. The graph was sourced to this reference which appears to originate from data by an author named Mike Reynolds, who published the book, Three Strikes and You're Out (1996) after his daughter was murdered. Regardless of the merits of your edits, it is clear that they were not routine cleanup or maintenance. Therefore, the relationship between our two edits is very weak and insignificant. If, however, I had made the same reversion of what I deemed to be OR, or made a series of edits removing content from anti-crime activist Mike Reynolds from the article, the relationship between our edits would be a bit stronger. Looking at the editors who voted to keep at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Climate change exaggeration, we see a record of strong coordination and support between each other, on many different articles, far and above routine cleanup and maintenance. The simplest explanation for this instance of coordination is votestacking, and this observation was made by User:StuartH. We see similar behavior on the recent arbcom case, where the same set of editors flocked to support GregJackP's disputed edits, while the overwhelming majority of uninvolved editors did not. We also see this flocking on various AfD's and RfC's, indicating that this editing behavior cannot be classified as random, as the evidence suggests a strong working relationship over time, devoted solely to the topic of climate change, and more importantly, a working relationship that seeks to advocate for the minority POV of climate change denial. The fact that such a large number of editors are working together to promote a minority POV forces one to look closer into this phenomenon, and the relationships which emerge after analyzing the intersection of editorial contributions to common articles. Viriditas (talk) 03:20, 11 September 2010 (UTC)
- Actually, I finally realized what happened, after running several different combinations to try to identify the source of the discrepancy. I was running the thing in two different tabs and somehow in one of the tabs the "all" button got unchecked, so it was only counting user talk pages in one tab and "all" in the other one. So I have struck my accusation of unreliability for the tool; it does apparently reliably count what it counts, the pages that have been edited in common. As far as I know, this thread is the first time we've ever crossed paths, so the fact that we have edited 24 pages in common says nothing at all about a working relationship between us, which is one of the points I've been trying to make. Woonpton (talk) 07:40, 10 September 2010 (UTC)
- Let's look at my wikistalk overlap with Viriditas, since he spent so much time analyzing it. V states above that since my one edit on the three strikes law was not similar in character to his, the "relationship" established by wikistalk would have to be interpreted as a "weak" or "insignificant" relationship, but if we had made similar edits, the relationship would be stronger, even though my one edit was two years after his last of two edits to the article. Okay, I went to the supermarket today and bought Coke; by this logic, the fact that any complete stranger went to the same supermarket year before last would constitute a relationship (although a weak or "insignificant" relationship to be sure) but if on further investigation we discovered that the stranger had bought Coke two years ago, then that would indicate a stronger relationship. No, that's not a relationship at all, it's just two random events being misinterpreted as a relationship. And even if a stranger went to the same supermarket at the same time I was there and bought Coke, that wouldn't be a relationship either; it's just a concurrence. But, (keeping in mind that these are just individual cases chosen to illustrate by analogy the levels of connectedness), if my neighbor and I were planning a block party and decided that each of us would buy a case of Coke, and then we each went to the supermarket and bought the Coke, that's not only a relationship, but a causal relationship. But a computer program that counted everyone who went to the supermarket and bought Coke over a period of years would not be able to distinguish between the vast number of people coincidentally buying Coke, and me and my neighbor, or any other combination of people buying coke in a coordinated fashion, and an analyst would be making a mistake if he misinterpreted the coincidences as being associated with each other, much less as being causally related.
- Collect at least understood that there should be some sort of statistical basis for asserting a departure from randomness before interpreting these results, when he attempted to create a sort of sampling distribution for groups of six. However, I'm puzzled by his challenge above, that I should "ask a math professor" how many ways there are to take 300 things six at a time. If he did indeed run all the unique combinations of 300 editors taken six at a time, he would have known how many runs he'd made and could have rattled it off; it's an impressive number. I knew that it would be a big number, 300!/6!294!, but it wasn't until last night that I sat down and calculated it, and then ran it through a computer program just to check my arithmetic; there are 962,822,846,700 of them. If he really ran all those runs I'm impressed, but am puzzled by his assurance that he sought to "maximize the amount of overlap"--by what means? By how he selected the sample of 300? And if so, how did he ensure that the groups he chose to draw conclusions about were similar to the group chosen to generate the "sampling distribution"?
- I'm also somewhat puzzled by the statement that there was only one combination in which the number of shared user talk pages was as much as 15, so he figured that anything over 15 with a group of six was significantly different from chance. The logic is good as far as it goes; by choosing a cutoff clear at the high end of the sampling distribution for the statistic, you stand a good chance of not being wrong if you say that a number higher than that is unusual (but IFF the groups of editors chosen for analysis are similar in nature to the groups of editors chosen to establish the sampling distribution). But even if that assumption were satisfied, logistically I'm puzzled how he determined that 15 was the highest value the statistic took. The customary thing to do here would be to program your runs to compile the chosen test statistic (number of shared user talk pages among all the editors in the group) and create a sampling distribution of the statistic itself so that you would know the shape and variance of the distribution. If he didn't run a computer program that generated the distribution of the statistic, how did he establish that 15 was the highest number generated; did he look at every single one of the nearly 963 billion results to determine that?
- At any rate, while the claim of running a large number of analyses to establish a quasi-"sampling distribution" gives a veneer of "mathiness" to the claim of "extraordinary cohesiveness" between a group of pro-science editors on the CC articles, the claim fell apart for me when I substituted non-science editors for some of the science editors in the group and got even more shared pages than Collect had found for the science editors (On the PD talk page I said 34 shared pages, but counting again I get 37, vs 29 for Collect's sample.) So I think there's a problem, a flawed assumption or premise somewhere that invalidates the conclusion. I'm not sure whether Collect has adequately demonstrated that anything over 15 shared user talk pages by six editors is (statistically) significantly different from chance (answers to the above questions could increase my degree of certainty either way, especially the implied question about how he ensured that the editors who generated the sampling statistic were similar enough to the editors chosen to draw conclusions about that one could have some confidence in the validity of the statistic. Generally that assurance is provided by being sure that both the sample chosen to create the sampling distribution and the experimental samples are randomly selected, but in this case it would have to be a different criterion, since the experimental sample is anything but randomly chosen). But whether or not he has demonstrated that his "sampling distribution" provides a valid standard, he has certainly failed to demonstrate that anything over 15 shared user talk pages establishes "extraordinary cohesiveness" among these six editors, let alone a further presumption of cooperative or coordinated editing. In other words, regardless of whether he has adequately demonstrated an "association" between the editors, he has certainly not established that his interpretation of the association, or his assignment of "cause" for the association, is correct.
- As for Viriditas' claims above about the editors, I find nothing in his (very differently-conceptualized from Collect's)analysis of wikistalk data to support those claims; I've been over and over those results today and I just don't see anything there. There are 673 occurrences of overlap among these ten editors, including 40 pages where four of the editors overlap, 21 where five overlap, 16 where six overlap, 2 where seven overlap, 4 where eight overlap, and 1 where nine overlap (the eights and the nine are all noticeboards). Even if he had given each and every one of these 673 overlaps the same minute attention and interpretation he gave to the one mainspace overlap between him and me, there's no statistical basis to draw any conclusions from about whether these are anything but random observations, and even if if one were to accept the notion that subjective interpretations provide a valid substitute for statistics, if he were as mistaken in those interpretations as he was in this case I wouldn't give much credence to the analyses.
- I didn't remember editing that page, at all, and was very surprised to read that I had removed a graph. It's not the sort of thing I would ordinarily do on my own; I'm not that bold an editor. So when I got some time last night, I looked up the history of that edit. It turns out I had been watching the NPOV noticeboard, and someone complained there about a graph they thought was misleading. I looked at the graph and agreed that its presentation was indeed misleading; it was presented to support the idea that crime had gone down in California because of the three strikes law, but in fact, anyone with a nominal ability to read graphs could see just looking at it that all but one of the crimes depicted in the graph had started going down before the law was passed, from two years to as long as ten years before. I don't see anything to support Viriditas' assertion that the graph was sourced to someone named Mike Reynolds or to data supplied by Mike Reynolds; the graph was created by a Misplaced Pages editor and the description on the file says the graph was created to "evaluate" the claims in that blog article about the three strikes law, which you say was written by Mike Reynolds although I can't find a name on it anywhere. (The data themselves were publicly available California crime statistics, not data supplied by the author of the blog article, whoever he was.) I would say the graph was created by the Misplaced Pages editor to support the claims rather than to evaluate them; if the intent had been to evaluate the claims, the reasonable comparison would have been between CA and states without a three strikes law; such a comparison would have shown that crime went down generally in the US during that period, in states without three strikes laws just as in states with them. The text of the article did mention (in another section) that the reduction in crime was nationwide and not just in three-strikes states, but the text of the California section was written to suggest that crime went down in California because of the three strikes law, and this graph was drawn, and placed, to support that text, even though the graph, carefully observed, didn't even support the assertion. There was a discussion on the article talk page which I participated in briefly after the brief NPOV/N discussion; I said there that I thought the graph should be deleted, and someone suggested I could delete it. I said I didn't know how; someone told me how to delete it, and I did, and have never looked at that page again til today. I notice that the article is much more neutral now than it was that day in 2008 when I visited it, and that the graph is not there, so I assume the removal must have had consensus. The graph was OR, or maybe more precisely SYNTH (I was new then and didn't know the difference) and didn't belong in Misplaced Pages. I know nothing of "anti-crime activist Mike Reynolds" and wasn't acting in opposition to him, as you seem to be suggesting above; the only place I've seen him mentioned is by you, in this thread. My only "opposition" is to any misuse, misrepresentation, or misinterpretation of data, by anyone, and if there were editors working on that article who had an "anti-Mike Reynolds" agenda, I wouldn't know about it, or them. The implication that if there had been such editors, the similarity of my edit to one of theirs would establish, prima facie, a relationship between us, is not credible and illustrates in a small way how misleading the overinterpretation of this tool can be.
- Viriditas' description of what I was doing there is so far from what actually happened, it just shows how wrong a quick impression can be. No, it's not up to us to "interpret the relationship" established by wikistalk; the wikistalk tool does not "establish relationships" and subjective interpretation of its results is not much different from reading tea leaves (and by the way, I see nothing in either Petri's or Viriditas' wikistalk data to elucidate the suggestions above that there are patterns in these data related to tea, coke, or caviar). The establishment and interpretation of relationships rests, not on subjective interpretation, but on the strength of the data themselves and how well they stand up to the rigor of statistical testing. There may some truth to the charge of votestacking and "close working relationship" among the editors named above, or there may not be, but wikistalk will not establish that truth, nor will selective interpretation of the results establish it, and people who point to wikistalk results as support for their suspicions about editors working as a coordinated "bloc" are not serving the project well. Woonpton (talk) 15:24, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
- As a side note, I'm curious what you think of this paper, which is potentially at least somewhat apposite. MastCell 16:44, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
- I wasn't able to print it out (I'm old-fashioned; in order to really absorb an article, I need a hard copy I can hold in my hand and underline and write comments in the margin and so forth) but on a quick scan from the screen, I'd say this is a very good article. It is indeed apposite, in several ways, except that the analysis is on a more sophisticated level statistically than the discussion here about the wikistalk tool. This article is pointing out the difficulties in interpreting the results of regression-based "causal analysis" and showing how even if you subject multivariate data to this kind of "sophisticated" statistical analysis, you can't be sure that you have adequately separated influences from similarities or affinities. The wikistalk tool of course generates nothing so sophisticated in terms of statistical analysis; it's just a counting tool, so it behooves us to be even more leery of using something primitive like this to support statements about relationships among people. Woonpton (talk) 18:52, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
Monty Hall problem
Welcome to the MHP discussion, it would be good to have a now voice in this argument which has been running for over two years now.
The article is already a FA so the argument is about rather unimportant matters of detail. I would be happy to explain what the main argument is about if you wish to join in. (Reply here) Martin Hogbin (talk) 13:58, 9 November 2010 (UTC)
- Well, I can't think of any sane reason to jump into an argument which has been running for over two years about rather unimportant matters of detail, but thanks for the welcome. I've read enough of the interminable mediation subpage to have a pretty good idea what the points of contention are; I find them mind-numbingly tedious, trivial, pedantic, and irrelevant. If no progress has been made in two years of discussion and two mediations, I certainly have no interest in pouring any of my time into an inevitably futile effort of trying to help.
- As for the article being an FA, I think it's probably time for FAR. I had looked at the article a couple of years ago (I don't remember exactly when, so I can't name a specific version) and thought it an excellent article: elegant, informative, illustrated with great visual aids to understanding; it was really quite remarkable, I thought, and after that I always used that article as an example of Misplaced Pages at its very best. I hadn't gone back to look again but assumed it had stayed a great article, until after I started reading that mediation page recently and went back to look at the article again. I was embarrassed that I've continued to praise the article; sometime between when I saw it last and now, it has lost its soul. It's way too long and filled with confusing and irrelevant minutiae; it's a mess. It seems unlikely to me that a lay reader, even if they did manage to read it all the way through, would be able to make heads or tails of it. So I think it's more than a trivial argument about unimportant details; something's gone wrong with the article at its core, and it seems unlikely that anything can be done about it. Woonpton (talk) 06:21, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
- Please pardon my intrusion. The inaccessibility of the article, that you described so well, is the very reason I stay in the fray. Against all rational explanation. Glkanter (talk) 15:42, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
Hello @Woonpton, it was nice to hear you are a statistician and your opinion about the MHP page. I'd be interested in your comments on MHP at citizendium.org, an attempt to start over with a clean slate, taking preemptive action on the bone of contention on wikipedia. See also a recent draft of a collection of "new" proofs. Richard Gill (talk) 04:46, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- I'd prefer not to be further drawn into this dispute, thank you. Woonpton (talk) 07:31, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- Very wise! I am no longer disputing, I am writing reliable sources (that's my job), since the existing ones are poor quality. Hence my sincere interest to know your reactions to new articles on MHP in other locations. In an attempt to get it right at the core. The wikipedia article is bogged down on a stupid controversy which will interest almost no readers while in the meantime life goes on and there are several new insights out there which add to the richness of the topic. Richard Gill (talk) 08:20, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- Trust me, you do not want to know what I think, but luckily for both of us, what I think is not relevant here at Misplaced Pages, where we are required to rely on existing secondary sources for our summary of a topic. We don't publish new research; if your formulations are found to be useful by other scholars in the field they will be incorporated into secondary sources (such as literature reviews or academic books devoted to the topic) by independent scholars, and when that happens, they can be incorporated into the Misplaced Pages article. That's how Misplaced Pages works. Woonpton (talk) 18:14, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- Speaking of reviews, I recently had an offer from the editor of a respectable-if-not-quite-first-tier, peer-reviewed, MEDLINE-indexed journal to write a review article on the topic of my choosing. Sadly, the first 3 or 4 review topics that came to mind were those where, on Misplaced Pages, ignorance is currently prevailing over reason because of a lack of suitable secondary-source reviews. MastCell 04:39, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
- Well, then, get those reviews written! :-) In the case of the Monty Hall problem, it seems from the outside (I haven't edited the article or talk, but have been watching the dispute from a cautious distance, > 10 foot pole) that there are adequate secondary sources that are not being put to good use in the article, while primary sources are being endlessly debated and second-guessed as to what the source really meant, or (more often, even) sources ignored altogether in favor of editors coming up with their own original research and synthesis; most of the disputes are about individual editors' ideas of what the Monty Hall problem is and how the solution should be argued, completely independent of sources. It's a mess. Woonpton (talk) 05:06, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
- Yes, it sounds pretty bad. About reviews, I think I don't have what it takes. I would never, ever feel comfortable writing a review about a topic outside my field of expertise. (I have a hard enough time feeling fully on top of my own field). But to be a truly successful
charlatandissident from scientific orthodoxy, one needs to be able to leverage one's expertise in field A to make confident pronouncements about field B, despite the fact that one knows less than nothing about field B. Most forms of arrant nonsense feature at least one individual leveraging their credentials in such a fashion. MastCell 05:13, 15 February 2011 (UTC)- I've been thinking about your dilemma in light of an only tangentially-related phenomenon I'm seeing more and more of lately in several different topic areas, of Misplaced Pages editors writing and publishing papers so the papers can be used as reliable sources to advance a POV in the Misplaced Pages article. It makes me think of the Escher drawing with the hand drawing the hand. At what point do we have to give up and say the whole system of academic work has broken down and the agenda-driven Misplaced Pages model has won over honest scholarship? Does that worry you? It worries me, but maybe it's just time for a long walk. Regards, Woonpton (talk) 21:50, 16 February 2011 (UTC)
- Yes, it sounds pretty bad. About reviews, I think I don't have what it takes. I would never, ever feel comfortable writing a review about a topic outside my field of expertise. (I have a hard enough time feeling fully on top of my own field). But to be a truly successful
- Well, then, get those reviews written! :-) In the case of the Monty Hall problem, it seems from the outside (I haven't edited the article or talk, but have been watching the dispute from a cautious distance, > 10 foot pole) that there are adequate secondary sources that are not being put to good use in the article, while primary sources are being endlessly debated and second-guessed as to what the source really meant, or (more often, even) sources ignored altogether in favor of editors coming up with their own original research and synthesis; most of the disputes are about individual editors' ideas of what the Monty Hall problem is and how the solution should be argued, completely independent of sources. It's a mess. Woonpton (talk) 05:06, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
- Speaking of reviews, I recently had an offer from the editor of a respectable-if-not-quite-first-tier, peer-reviewed, MEDLINE-indexed journal to write a review article on the topic of my choosing. Sadly, the first 3 or 4 review topics that came to mind were those where, on Misplaced Pages, ignorance is currently prevailing over reason because of a lack of suitable secondary-source reviews. MastCell 04:39, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
- Trust me, you do not want to know what I think, but luckily for both of us, what I think is not relevant here at Misplaced Pages, where we are required to rely on existing secondary sources for our summary of a topic. We don't publish new research; if your formulations are found to be useful by other scholars in the field they will be incorporated into secondary sources (such as literature reviews or academic books devoted to the topic) by independent scholars, and when that happens, they can be incorporated into the Misplaced Pages article. That's how Misplaced Pages works. Woonpton (talk) 18:14, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- Very wise! I am no longer disputing, I am writing reliable sources (that's my job), since the existing ones are poor quality. Hence my sincere interest to know your reactions to new articles on MHP in other locations. In an attempt to get it right at the core. The wikipedia article is bogged down on a stupid controversy which will interest almost no readers while in the meantime life goes on and there are several new insights out there which add to the richness of the topic. Richard Gill (talk) 08:20, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
- Don't worry, I don't make my living by writing wikipedia pages, I make my living by writing reliable (indeed, highly cited!) sources in mathematics and statistics. And I do know how (and why) wikipedia works, and have no wish to change that or to break the rules. That's why I took the trouble to write up some "Truths", of similar startling nature to something like "6 is not a prime number because it is divisible by 2", and get them published in peer reviewed (scientific) literature. At least no stupid editor can now prevent a less stupid editor from using this "Truth" in the future, on the pretext that it is not written up explicitly in some "reliable source". Too bad that I'm now disqualified, by my very expertise, for editing an article in my own field. Misplaced Pages will have to wait ten years or so for new (to the literature, not new at all to sensible people) insights, and for reconciliation of the squabbling school children. Richard Gill (talk) 15:32, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
I don't recall seeing the data you said you were tabulating . Did you put this someplace where I might have missed it? I think it might be quite helpful now that Elen has drafted a proposed decision. -- Rick Block (talk) 03:57, 14 March 2011 (UTC)
Comment and thanks
I was surprised to see old Monty up for Arbitration, likewise amazed by the trivia under contention, and unreasonably cheered to see your occasional good-humored comment in the mix. Thanks for that :) I hadn't seen the article when it was really good; FAR with a historical link isn't a bad idea for attracting new eyes.
As to "editors writing and publishing papers so the papers can be used as reliable sources to advance a POV in the Misplaced Pages article" -- this happens within academia all the time, without the bit about Misplaced Pages... counterfactual claims and theories can survive for a generation on the industry and focus of a group of experts who believe in them, or absent belief have hinged their careers on them. But at least it lets us offload the question of formal peer review onto a scientific publishing system that has had a few centuries to reach a productive equilibrium. –SJ+ 06:53, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Anyone home?
Are you still around, or reading this site at all? I was looking through some old discussions and smiling at some of your commentary, and I was wondering if you were gone for good or just laying low. Cheers. MastCell 19:26, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
- Ditto. -- Rick Block (talk) 04:59, 16 May 2012 (UTC)
Dispute resolution survey
Dispute Resolution – Survey Invite Hello Woonpton. I am currently conducting a study on the dispute resolution processes on the English Misplaced Pages, in the hope that the results will help improve these processes in the future. Whether you have used dispute resolution a little or a lot, now we need to know about your experience. The survey takes around five minutes, and the information you provide will not be shared with third parties other than to assist in analyzing the results of the survey. No personally identifiable information will be released. Please click HERE to participate. You are receiving this invitation because you have had some activity in dispute resolution over the past year. For more information, please see the associated research page. Steven Zhang 22:57, 5 April 2012 (UTC) |
You are missed
When you stopped editing, Misplaced Pages got a little less intelligent and a little less fun. The fact that Misplaced Pages can't retain smart, incisive, clever people like you is the reason I think the project is ultimately doomed. Anyhow, hope you're out there and doing well. Cheers. MastCell 03:33, 11 September 2013 (UTC)
- You are missed! :-) – SJ + 08:22, 4 January 2014 (UTC)
- I just had cause to look at some very old discussions, and was reminded of your contributions. You are remembered, even after a long absence, and I too miss your contributions. And, for the record, you were right and I was wrong – Abd was a much bigger problem than I recognised at the time. Hopefully you helped me to learn, and I am thankful. EdChem (talk) 09:53, 16 December 2016 (UTC)