History: Proceedings
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The Proceedings of the 6th International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration (WikiSym '10)
The proceedings of the symposium including PDFs will be made available here and can be found at the ACM Digital Library.
Alternatively, you can download the WikiSym 2010 proceedings as a whole file, or clicking on the links for the specific session/paper you're interested in.
Past proceedings
WikiSym 2010 proceedings
Front matter
- Front matter (SC, PC, table of content, keynotes...): PDF
Research papers
Session 1: Understanding Wikipedia
- p13: Who Integrates the Networks of Knowledge in Wikipedia? by Iassen Halatchliyski, Johannes Moskaliuk, Joachim Kimmerle and Ulrike Cress. PDF
- p18: What Did They Do? Deriving High-Level Edit Histories in Wikis by Peter Kin-Fong Fong and Robert P. Biuk-Aghai. PDF
Session 2: Human Wiki Interaction
- p12: Deep Hypertext with Embedded Revision Control Implemented in Regular Expressions by Victor Grishchenko. PDF
- p21: Semantic Search on Heterogeneous Wiki Systems by Fabrizio Orlandi and Alexandre Passant. PDF
Session 3: Wiki organization, management and sustainability
- p7: Wikis at Work: Success Factors and Challenges for Sustainability of Enterprise Wikis by Jonathan Grudin and Erika Poole PDF
- p8: Model-aware Wiki Analysis Tools: the Case of HistoryFlow by Oscar Diaz and Gorka Puente. PDF
- p17: ThinkFree: Using a Visual Wiki for IT Knowledge Management in a Tertiary Institution by Christian Hirsch, John Hosking, John Grundy and Tim Chaffe
Session 4: Open collaboration
- p10: Openness as an Asset. A Classification System for Online Communities Based on Actor-Network Theory by Annalisa Pelizza. PDF
- p6: The Austrian way of Wiki(pedia)! - Development of a Structured Wiki-based Encyclopedia within a Local Austrian Context by Christoph Trattner, Ilire Hasani-Mavriqi, Denis Helic and Helmut Leitner
- p3: (B)ut this is blog maths and we're free to make up conventions as we go along: Polymath1 and the Modalities of Mathematics in the Open by Michael J. Barany. PDF
- p15: A Wiki-based Collective Intelligence Approach to Formulate a Body of Knowledge (BOK) for a New Discipline by Yoshifumi Masunaga, Yoshiyuki Shoji and Kazunari Ito