Consider the Redirect: A Missing Dimension of Wikipedia Research
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Hill, Benjamin Mako
Shaw, Aaron
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Abstract
A feature of most wikis, “redirects” are special pages that
silently transport visitors to other pages. In Wikipedia, the
only indication that one has visited a redirect is that the
page title and the URL in the browser are different and a
very small hyperlinked message appears near the article title
(see Figure 1). Clicking on this link will take the user
to the redirect page itself. Redirects in Wikipedia are normal
pages that begin with “#redirect [[Target]]” where
“Target” is the page to which visitors will be redirected.
Although redirect pages can contain extensive text, their
content is almost never viewed and very rarely edited. Despite
their near-invisibility, redirects play an important role
in shaping activity in Wikipedia. Redirects are a majority
of all article pages in English Wikipedia and are viewed millions
of times each month. They represent a central form
of the encyclopedia’s “hidden order” [7] and contribute to
wikis’ usability and user experience.
That said, redirects have attracted very little attention from
researchers studying Wikipedia and are, with rare exceptions
(e.g., [3, 8]) rarely discussed explicitly in the analysis
of Wikipedia data. In this note, we make several contributions:
First, we introduce a longitudinal database that
makes it easier to study redirects in English Wikipedia over
time and use this database to characterize the enormous volume
of activity around redirects. Then, we use the database
to illustrate the importance of considering redirects in two
relationships of central interest to many researchers: (1) the
distribution of edits over articles and (2) the relationship between
views and edits. We conclude with guidance for how
researchers should account for redirects in future work.
