Is Wikipedia a reliable source for information?

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In summary, the reliability of information on Wikipedia is a topic of debate. While some may claim that a significant portion of the information found on the site is incorrect, others have found it to be a reliable source for technical information. However, it is important to keep in mind that anyone can contribute to the site, so it is necessary to critically evaluate the information found on Wikipedia. Additionally, the accuracy of information may vary depending on the topic, with some articles being more prone to errors due to controversial or specialized content. Therefore, it is always advisable to cross-check information from other sources and to be aware of potential biases or incorrect information on Wikipedia.
  • #1
phyzguy
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I often hear it said that the information on Wikipedia is unreliable - for example, a recent post stated that "90% of information on Wikipedia is incorrect". However, my experience has been just the opposite. I use it often for technical reference and rarely if ever find incorrect information. It appears that technical information may be more reliable than 'general interest' (for example, pages on movie stars, etc.). What do people think? Do people have specific examples of incorrect information?
 
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  • #2
phyzguy said:
I often hear it said that the information on Wikipedia is unreliable - for example, a recent post stated that "90% of information on Wikipedia is incorrect". However, my experience has been just the opposite. I use it often for technical reference and rarely if ever find incorrect information. It appears that technical information may be more reliable than 'general interest' (for example, pages on movie stars, etc.). What do people think? Do people have specific examples of incorrect information?
It's not sufficiently controlled. It used to be that 'anyone could contribute'.

Example of incorrect statement: "whereupon the hot Zirconium alloy metal used for casing the nuclear fuel rods spontaneously explodes in contact with the cooling water or steam, which leads to the separation of water into its constituent elements (hydrogen and oxygen)."
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressurized_water_reactor#Disadvantages

There are a few other misrepresentations in that article.

There was another nuclear article, but I don't remember the specific article, that contained an incorrect description of control rods.
 
  • #3
It varies a lot. Which is why you always look up the primary references and try to corroborate them if you are writing a paper.

Interestingly - wikipedia tries to track external peer review:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:External_peer_review

...and it is easy enough to find comparison studies for different fields.

90% is probably a bit harsh.
 
  • #4
Some articles are pure fabrication. For example:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Snyder_(racing_driver)"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Snyder"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Snyder_(shortstop)"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Snyder_(second_baseman)"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_L._Snyder"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Snyder"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Snyder,_Jr."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_S._Snyder"
 
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  • #5
phyzguy,

Do you use google scholar when you want peer reviewed and quoted research to your questions ?

Rhody...
 
  • #6
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  • #7
IMO, Wikipedia is OK for topics that (a) are relatively non-controversial and (b) have enough people who are experts in it so that there is a sufficient pool of people who will take the trouble to correct false information.

If there is controversy, either legitimate or crackpot-created, partisans can insert biased or even outright incorrect information. It will probably get corrected eventually, but there can be back-and-forth "editing wars" in which the article is in a constant state of flux.

If it's a specialized topic that not many people are expert in, incorrect information can go uncorrected for a long time.
 
  • #8
The other day I went to a page about a well known crackpot and all of the criticism of his work was gone and it was a glowing review of the guy. I went to the talk page and apparently the crackpot and his following keep deleting the criticism and re-writing the page.
 
  • #9
Evo said:
The other day I went to a page about a well known crackpot and all of the criticism of his work was gone and it was a glowing review of the guy. I went to the talk page and apparently the crackpot and his following keep deleting the criticism and re-writing the page.

That's why it is always a good idea to check the page edit history.

As far as I understand such edits qualify as vandalism, and they lead to page locking by editors.
 
  • #10
Borek said:
That's why it is always a good idea to check the page edit history.

As far as I understand such edits qualify as vandalism, and they lead to page locking by editors.
I was shocked that the wiki people hadn't cracked down, from the discussion, not all of them seemed to understand the lack of science.The wiki mods were arguing amongst themselves over what to allow.
 
  • #11
Evo said:
I was shocked that the wiki people hadn't cracked down, from the discussion, not all of them seemed to understand the lack of science.The wiki mods were arguing amongst themselves over what to allow.

They are encyclopédistes, not scientists :smile:
 
  • #12
phyzguy said:
I often hear it said that the information on Wikipedia is unreliable - for example, a recent post stated that "90% of information on Wikipedia is incorrect". However, my experience has been just the opposite. I use it often for technical reference and rarely if ever find incorrect information. It appears that technical information may be more reliable than 'general interest' (for example, pages on movie stars, etc.). What do people think? Do people have specific examples of incorrect information?
Like you, I've rarely found errors, but I only use it to refresh my memory about details I've forgotten or didn't bother to memorize, like the spherical representation of the Laplacian. For technical information, I find it to be a good reference.

That said, you have to keep in mind that for the most part, anyone can edit and contribute to a page, so you have to critically review any information you find there. For example, the first time I checked out Wikipedia, I decided to read what it had to say about special relativity. I ran across what appeared to be a curious claim, so I checked out the discussion page and discovered that some crackpot had his pet theory about why Einstein was wrong and kept editing the page, and others kept reverting his changes and telling him to quit adding bogus information. I just happened to stumble onto the page before his latest changes had been removed.

Obviously, Wikipedia will have errors in it, but the frequency of errors really depends on the topic, as others have noted. Usually when I hear someone dismiss Wikipedia as unreliable, it's more of a rhetorical tactic of trying to discredit the source rather than addressing a valid point.
 
  • #13
I think certain topics are prone to errors or misinformation/disinformation, particularly in the area of politics.
 
  • #14
There's actually a physics error I noticed today but didn't feel like fixing. (feel free whomever..)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroweak_theory

if you look at the the definition of [itex]J_{\mu}^3[/itex] after the neutral current:

I believe
[tex]\bar{f} \gamma_{\mu} f \rightarrow \bar{f}_{L} \gamma_{\mu} f_L[/tex]

they forgot the left handed projection. It IS important, and a very big deal if you don't use it properly.
 
  • #15
It's not 100% reliable, but in my experience it's more reliable than other encyclopedias, and more available too.
 
  • #16
Even when a sentence does link to a source, it is always best to actually check whether the source is reliable or not. I have found some scientific articles which link to popular science blogs as sources.
 
  • #17
When it comes to mathematics, it's generally quite accurate I think.
 
  • #18
Wiki for basic information is probably the best place to go, and I would argue that it's probably better than books in most cases. Not specifically in terms of 100% accurate content, but the ease of source following and related articles via hyperlinks.

Although not officially reviewed there are an army of anal people which means vandalism and mistakes are corrected pretty quickly.

Beyond the basics it's a bit dodgy, but it's now my first port of call for anything I don't know.
 
  • #19
mishrashubham said:
Even when a sentence does link to a source, it is always best to actually check whether the source is reliable or not. I have found some scientific articles which link to popular science blogs as sources.
I found one article that linked to a thread at PF as a source. Might have been a PF member? :-p
 
  • #20
Thanks for all of the responses. I'll continue to rely on it, but I agree that I wouldn't use it for something I was publishing without checking against a peer-reviewed source.
 
  • #21
phyzguy said:
Thanks for all of the responses. I'll continue to rely on it, but I agree that I wouldn't use it for something I was publishing without checking against a peer-reviewed source.
Wikipedia is just a quick reference, you should never use it as a source.
 
  • #22
Evo said:
Wikipedia is just a quick reference, you should never use it as a source.

Just like you shouldn't (past elementary school) use Encyclopedia Britannica or Funk and Wagnall's as a source.

Personally, as our little E is getting older, I think I'm going to find myself missing the home-set multi-volume encyclopedia. There's something about having a printout version available for looking up small facts or just "browsing." I remember (as a child) picking up our family set volume by volume at the grocery-store. I see old sets come up pretty cheap on Amazon... so I guess we'll be able to get something set up for her.
 
  • #23
physics girl phd said:
Just like you shouldn't (past elementary school) use Encyclopedia Britannica or Funk and Wagnall's as a source.

Personally, as our little E is getting older, I think I'm going to find myself missing the home-set multi-volume encyclopedia. There's something about having a printout version available for looking up small facts or just "browsing." I remember (as a child) picking up our family set volume by volume at the grocery-store. I see old sets come up pretty cheap on Amazon... so I guess we'll be able to get something set up for her.

Apart from being nice to have, wiki is probably still easier. The wiki trap of hyperlinks and new tabs is just insane.

Two hours later with 15 tabs open. You've gone from reading about force and impulses to hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic.
 
  • #24
xxChrisxx said:
Two hours later with 15 tabs open. You've gone from reading about force and impulses to hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic.

That's a known phenomenon:

the_problem_with_wikipedia.png


Question is - does it make you any wiser?

extended_mind.png
 
  • #25
Evo said:
I found one article that linked to a thread at PF as a source. Might have been a PF member? :-p

Yes, it linked to my post, and in that post I used the Wiki article as a citation to prove my point. Circular logic is the best kind of logic because it's circular.
 
  • #26
FlexGunship said:
Circular logic is the best kind of logic because it's circular.
:smile: A well rounded argument.
 
  • #27
vela said:
Like you, I've rarely found errors, but I only use it to refresh my memory about details I've forgotten or didn't bother to memorize, like the spherical representation of the Laplacian.

Just out of curiosity, which page do you use for the spherical representation of the Laplacian?
 
  • #28
  • #29
Wikipedia is my first choice to look up anything!
Whenever I see wiki has an entry, I go and look at that first.
Especially for basic information in areas I know little about.

But here's my observations on the things I've been trying to look up doing my stuff on PF.

For computer science, I don't usually use wiki.
There are other sources with more explicit information.

On math wiki is accurate but also often unnecessarily complex.
I think we need some simplifications.
Either way, wiki is my first choice to look anything up on math!

On mechanics wiki is okay, although I seldom feel the need to look up anything on it.
Classical mechanics is simply too well established I guess.

On electronics wiki is mostly non-existent. We really need need more articles there.
By now, I know I should not search for this on wiki.
I suggested to a couple of members to write something on wiki, seeing how their comments on PF would fit quite well on wiki. ;)

On thermodynamics (my new hobby) there's some information, but I miss the clear-cut formulas with proper conditions when they can be used.
There's only one page with a table of thermodynamic formulas that I use every now and then, and it should be improved.
 
  • #31
I like Serena said:
Hmm, it only gives a random place on this sphere...

Then try again!
 
  • #33
Astronuc said:
It's not sufficiently controlled. It used to be that 'anyone could contribute'.

Example of incorrect statement: "whereupon the hot Zirconium alloy metal used for casing the nuclear fuel rods spontaneously explodes in contact with the cooling water or steam, which leads to the separation of water into its constituent elements (hydrogen and oxygen)."
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressurized_water_reactor#Disadvantages

There are a few other misrepresentations in that article.

There was another nuclear article, but I don't remember the specific article, that contained an incorrect description of control rods.

Well, the final product is ZrO2 +H2 but H2O must technically be broken up before one can get ZrO2
 
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  • #34
vela said:
I tried this link and it took me to this page. :smile:

I usually just google the term I'm looking for and typically a Wikipedia page shows up as one of the first few entries. In this case, searching for "laplacian" led me to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laplace_operator.

Thanx. I wondered if it took you to a page I wrote. It didn't! ;)
 
  • #35
Of course, we can also ask how reliable peer-reviewed journals are as sources ... after all, the vast majority of published papers have proved to be wrong in some important way right?

Generally we should not be arguing from authority anyway should we - it's just that sometimes we have to take someones word for it. Whose word depends on what the "it" is.
 

Related to Is Wikipedia a reliable source for information?

1. Is Wikipedia considered a credible source for information?

The credibility of Wikipedia as a source for information is a highly debated topic. While some argue that the open editing format of Wikipedia makes it unreliable, others argue that the large number of contributors and strict guidelines for editing make it a credible source. Ultimately, the reliability of Wikipedia depends on the specific topic and the quality of the sources cited.

2. Who can edit Wikipedia pages?

Anyone with internet access can edit Wikipedia pages. This means that the information on Wikipedia can be edited by anyone, regardless of their expertise or qualifications. However, Wikipedia has a team of volunteer editors who monitor and review edits to ensure accuracy and reliability.

3. Are there any guidelines for editing Wikipedia?

Yes, Wikipedia has a set of guidelines and policies that all contributors are expected to follow. These include guidelines for citing sources, neutral point of view, and avoiding original research. Violating these guidelines can result in edits being reverted or pages being deleted.

4. How accurate is the information on Wikipedia?

The accuracy of information on Wikipedia varies. While some articles are well-researched and contain accurate information, others may contain errors or biased information. It is important to critically evaluate the sources cited and cross-check information with other reliable sources.

5. Can I use Wikipedia as a source for academic research?

It is generally not recommended to use Wikipedia as a source for academic research. This is because the information on Wikipedia can be edited by anyone and may not always be reliable. However, Wikipedia can be a good starting point for research and can lead you to more credible sources.

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