Research talk:Newcomer task suggestions/Work log/2014-10-02
Thursday, October 2nd
editGiven the low number of observations, I'm using a en:beta distribution to approximate the error around proportion measurements. This results in some unusual-looking error bars where the observed proportion can appear outside of them. This is actually more honest to the underlying uncertainty though, so I'll risk the confusion.
At what rate do users see recommendations?
editHere, we can see a clear difference between the flyout-only condition and the conditions that contain post-edit. There's even a significant difference between the rate at which users were impressed in the both vs. post-edit condition for large wikis. This is likely due to users clicking on the "Recommendations" link before they have edited an article.
At what rate do users accept recommendations?
editHere, we see roughly the same trends that we saw with impressions. This is probably because seeing a recommendation is required for accepting it. Let's look at the conditional proportion next.
At what rate do users who see recommendations accept (at least one) recommendation?
editHere, we can see "flyout" shining in the way that we suspected. For large wikis, the flyout condition see a substantially larger proportion of impressed users clicking (accepting) at least one recommendation. There's two potential explanations that I can think of:
- (Ready for recommendation) When users ask for recommendations, they are in a better position to accept them.
- (Propensity) Users who notice the "recommendations" link on the personal bar are simply more likely to accept a recommendations.
At what rate do users edit recommended articles?
editLike we saw when looking at the raw impression rate and acceptance rate, we see post-edit conditions resulting in a higher rate of edited recommended articles. I don't think this is telling us much.
At what rate do users who accepted recommendations edit at least one recommendation?
editHere, we're looking at conditional probabilities again. It looks like editors were not significantly more likely to edit an article recommendation that they accepted the flyout condition. This runs counter to my hypothesis -- that users would actually have better recommendations and would therefore be more likely to follow-through with an edit in the flyout condition.
End
editThat's all for today folks. --Halfak (WMF) (talk) 22:24, 2 October 2014 (UTC)