Wikimedia CEE Spring 2019/Top CCC articles
Cultural Context Content (CCC) is the group of articles in a Wikipedia language edition that relates to the editors' geographical and cultural context (places, traditions, language, politics, agriculture, biographies, events, etcetera.). Collecting CCC is useful in order to assess the state of knowledge equality and cross-cultural coverage (i.e the content gaps), which is the goal of the project Wikipedia Cultural Diversity Observatory.
By taking the most relevant part of CCC, we obtain the Top CCC lists. Top CCC lists are generated lists which may help in providing content for this minimal cultural coverage. Inspired by the Vital articles lists, the Top CCC articles present the most rellevant articles in terms of different metrics (e.g. number of editors or pageviews) and specific content types (e.g. geolocated articles or women) from a language cultural context or country's cultural context.
The Top CCC articles lists are:
- Editors: list of CCC articles with most number of editors
- Featured: list of CCC articles with featured article distinction and with most bytes and references (weights: 0.8, 0.1 and 0.1 respectively)
- Geolocated: list of CCC articles with geolocation with most links coming from CCC
- Keywords: list of CCC articles with keywords on title with most bytes
- Women: list of CCC articles categorized in Wikidata as women with most edits
- Men: list of CCC articles categorized in Wikidata as men with most edits
- Created First Three Years: list of CCC articles created during the first three years and with most edits
- Created Last Year: list of CCC articles created during the last year and with most edits
- Pageviews: list of CCC articles with most pageviews during the last month
- Discussions: list of CCC articles with most edits in talk pages, i.e. the (probably) most disputed articles on a Wikipedia
In this page you can find a table for each the language participants to Wikimedia CEE Spring 2019. Each table contains links to the ten Top CCC article lists (see the rows) from the first language and their coverage by a second language (see the columns).