Difference between revisions of "WWW Wiki gene"

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<section begin=title />The Gene Wiki project<section end=title />
The Gene Wiki project
 
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<section begin=url />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E2F1<section end=url />
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<section begin=abstract />The '''Gene Wiki''' project aims to create Wikipedia articles for every human gene whose function has been assigned. This provides pages that are ideally suited for free, community-driven, integrated information resources. Access to the project is through the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Gene_Wiki Gene Wiki Portal], which contains guidelines for contributors. The pages are easy to find since they are linked to the HGNC recognized gene name. For example, the URL links to the human E2F1 transcription factor page.<section end=abstract />
The '''Gene Wiki''' project aims to create Wikipedia articles for every human gene whose function has been assigned. This provides pages that are ideally suited for free, community-driven, integrated information resources. Access to the project is through the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Gene_Wiki Gene Wiki Portal], which contains guidelines for contributors. The pages are easy to find since they are linked to the HGNC recognized gene name. For example, the URL links to the human E2F1 transcription factor page.
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Latest revision as of 17:03, 28 January 2012

The Gene Wiki project

Genewiki.wikipedia.org.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E2F1

The Gene Wiki project aims to create Wikipedia articles for every human gene whose function has been assigned. This provides pages that are ideally suited for free, community-driven, integrated information resources. Access to the project is through the Gene Wiki Portal, which contains guidelines for contributors. The pages are easy to find since they are linked to the HGNC recognized gene name. For example, the URL links to the human E2F1 transcription factor page.

===Reference===

Good et al. (2012) The Gene Wiki in 2011: community intelligence applied to human gene annotation. Nucleic Acids Res 40:D1255-61. (pmid: 22075991)

PubMed ] [ DOI ] The Gene Wiki is an open-access and openly editable collection of Wikipedia articles about human genes. Initiated in 2008, it has grown to include articles about more than 10,000 genes that, collectively, contain more than 1.4 million words of gene-centric text with extensive citations back to the primary scientific literature. This growing body of useful, gene-centric content is the result of the work of thousands of individuals throughout the scientific community. Here, we describe recent improvements to the automated system that keeps the structured data presented on Gene Wiki articles in sync with the data from trusted primary databases. We also describe the expanding contents, editors and users of the Gene Wiki. Finally, we introduce a new automated system, called WikiTrust, which can effectively compute the quality of Wikipedia articles, including Gene Wiki articles, at the word level. All articles in the Gene Wiki can be freely accessed and edited at Wikipedia, and additional links and information can be found at the project's Wikipedia portal page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Gene_Wiki.



 





The Gene Wiki project

The Gene Wiki project



URL

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E2F1


Abstract

The Gene Wiki project aims to create Wikipedia articles for every human gene whose function has been assigned. This provides pages that are ideally suited for free, community-driven, integrated information resources. Access to the project is through the Gene Wiki Portal, which contains guidelines for contributors. The pages are easy to find since they are linked to the HGNC recognized gene name. For example, the URL links to the human E2F1 transcription factor page.


Reference

Good et al. (2012) The Gene Wiki in 2011: community intelligence applied to human gene annotation. Nucleic Acids Res 40:D1255-61. (pmid: 22075991)

PubMed ] [ DOI ] The Gene Wiki is an open-access and openly editable collection of Wikipedia articles about human genes. Initiated in 2008, it has grown to include articles about more than 10,000 genes that, collectively, contain more than 1.4 million words of gene-centric text with extensive citations back to the primary scientific literature. This growing body of useful, gene-centric content is the result of the work of thousands of individuals throughout the scientific community. Here, we describe recent improvements to the automated system that keeps the structured data presented on Gene Wiki articles in sync with the data from trusted primary databases. We also describe the expanding contents, editors and users of the Gene Wiki. Finally, we introduce a new automated system, called WikiTrust, which can effectively compute the quality of Wikipedia articles, including Gene Wiki articles, at the word level. All articles in the Gene Wiki can be freely accessed and edited at Wikipedia, and additional links and information can be found at the project's Wikipedia portal page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Gene_Wiki.