Collaborate/J2W
J2W
Journal to wiki publication is the process of creating or improving Wikipedia, Wikibooks, Wikiversity or similar sites by adapting suitably licensed peer-reviewed research, with author attribution and a link to the original paper.
This is made possible by open access research with Creative Commons licences (CC-By, CC-By-SA or CC0).
Not all research is suitable for journal-to-wiki publication. As well as being peer-reviewed and suitably licensed, a paper or book chapter needs to be suitably broad in its scope to give an overview of current knowledge. Individual pieces of primary research are not usually suitable. However, review papers or other works that review, synthesise, or summarise an area of research are ideal for Wikipedia.
Adapting a paper for Wikipedia
The process of converting a paper for Wikipedia involves
- making the language accessible to a lay audience
- explaining technical terms and acronyms on their first appearance, with links to other Wikipedia articles
- adopting the relevant structure, which on Wikipedia means a short lead section summarising the whole article, then sections with headings
- removing subjective or speculative material: Wikipedia's function is descriptive rather than persuasive
- uploading figures to Wikimedia Commons from where they can be included in Wikimedia sites
Other Wikimedia projects
Wikibooks is a collection of open-content textbooks, allowing a less constrained style of text than Wikipedia. Just like Wikipedia, Wikibooks forbids original research: all content has to based on material that has already been published and peer-reviewed.
Wikiversity is more liberal, allowing original research.
Advantages
- Bring research to an enormous audience of lay people and academic peers, supporting Wikimedia's charitable goal of free knowledge for everyone
- Encourage redistribution and translation
- Get credit and citation of the original published paper
Examples
- The PLoS Computational Biology article Circular Permutation in Proteins was adapted into the Wikipedia article Circular Permutation in Proteins.
- Part of the Wikibooks textbook on Transportation Economics was developed from research published by its authors in the Journal of Transport Economics and Policy.
- An obituary of the chimpanzee researcher Emil Wolfgang Menzel, Jr. in PLoS Biology was adapted into a Wikipedia article about Menzel with a photo shared through Wikimedia Commons. Both the article and photo credit and link back to the original obituary.
- Wikipedia's article on Approximate Bayesian computation is built largely on a Topic Page article in PLoS Computational Biology. PLoS Computational Biology is publishing a series of Topic Pages that are developed to be Wikipedia-compatible.
- Eurazhdarcho, a newly-discovered species of pterosaur, was announced in a peer-reviewed paper in PLoS ONE in 2013. A lay summary appeared as a Wikipedia article within hours of the paper's publication. PLoS ONE's free licence allowed the figures and text to be copied, with attribution to the original authors.
Next steps
- Remember that publishing research through a non-open-access publisher, or a publisher with a non-commercial licence, may prevent journal-to-wiki publication, depending on the terms of the agreement with that publisher.
- If you are in a Jisc-funded project, contact the Jisc Wikimedia Ambassador, Martin Poulter, (martin.poulter
wikimedia.org.uk).
- For other inquiries in the UK, contact Wikimedia UK (info
wikimedia.org.uk).