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Society for Neuroscience - Neuroscience Wikipedia Initiative
Society for Neuroscience - Neuroscience Wikipedia Initiative
sfn.org
  Welcome to the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute | UC...
Welcome to the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute | UC...
ucneuroscienceinstitute.c...
 

Members of the Society for Neuroscience, welcome to Wikipedia!

We hope that you'll enjoy your visit and decide to contribute to Wikipedia. Wikipedia's goal is to offer well-referenced, comprehensive, accurate articles that are intelligible to lay-people but also useful, at times, to the specialist. All content in Wikipedia — words as well as images and other media — is free, both in terms of cost and in terms of copyright.

Getting started on Wikipedia is fairly easy, but there are areas where some people have trouble. This page explains how to navigate through those areas.

If you would like to be identified with this initiative, you can add {{User Soc Neurosci}} to your user page, producing this user box:




[edit] How to find help

[edit] WikiProject Neuroscience

This page is hosted under the WikiProject for Neuroscience, a group of Wikipedians devoted to improving the coverage of neuroscience topics on Wikipedia. The members of this WikiProject will be glad to assist you as you take your first steps in contributing to Wikipedia. You can reach them by leaving a message on their talk page. This WikiProject keeps lists of articles that need attention, and offers other ideas for contributing.

[edit] Switchboard script

A team of friendly, experienced Wikipedians has also volunteered to be on call to assist you. We've arranged a software tool for you to contact them directly, a kind of "switchboard" that will connect with one of these volunteers. If you'd like that tool, please change "Proteins" in the following box to your user name and click "Help please"; on the following page, click on "Save page" to finalize the installation. (You may need to reload the page after saving it.)


Afterwards, a "help me!" tab will be added to the top of every page you visit; clicking on that tab will connect you with a Wikipedian who has volunteered to help you.

This sign-up form will give you a few other helpful software tools, which are explained in the next section.

[edit] Additional scripts

In addition to giving you access to a "switchboard" of helpful Wikipedians, signing up will confer three other useful scripts:

  1. Explain Wikipedia acronyms. More experienced Wikipedians often use acronyms for brevity in discussions, and in making wikilinks. Typical examples are WP:FAC for Wikipedia:Featured article candidates, or WP:NOR for Wikipedia:No original research. Although such acronyms are an efficient shorthand, they're often seen as daunting for newcomers to Wikipedia. Signing up will add a "Explain acronyms" link in the "navigation" box in the lefthand column of every page. Clicking on that link will box all of the known acronyms in red; when the mouse cursor is placed within a red box, an explanation of that acronym is given.
  2. Give the assessment of each article and every wikilink within it. When reading an article, it's helpful to know its assessed quality and the quality of the articles to which it links. More generally, to survey the quality of a whole field such as olfaction, it's helpful to be able to see the assessed quality of an arbitrary list of articles. Signing up will add an "Assess links" link to the "Toolbox" in the left-hand column, which colors all the links on the present page by their quality assessment, from red for "Stub" to green for "Good article" to light blue for "Featured Article". Redirect links are shown in magenta. Unassessed articles are shown in the normal dark blue, but enclosed in a dashed red box. In addition, the article's own assessment is stated at the top of the page, with the article title colored appropriately.
  3. Editing tips when you need them. Learning the various editing commands and when/how they should used can be daunting for newcomers to Wikipedia. Even experienced Wikipedians sometimes need a quick reminder of how to do a particular formatting, e.g., setting up nested tables. Signing up adds a tab labelled "Editing tips" to the top of editing pages only. Clicking on that link adds a bright green bar above the editing window; clicking on that bar opens an expandable menu of tips on how to do most editing tasks on Wikipedia. Hovering the mouse over a link gives a capsule summary, whereas clicking on the link gives more details.

[edit] Ways to contribute

Probably the best and most obvious way for you, as a scientist, to contribute to Wikipedia is to edit articles related to your field. There are many ways to do that, depending on your editing skills and the time you wish to invest. Click on "show" (far right) to read more.

[edit] WikiProjects

The scientists and physicians contributing to Wikipedia often form small communities dedicated to improving the coverage of certain fields. These communities are known as WikiProjects and in some ways resemble a scientific society. WikiProjects also can also have sub-communities (task forces) working on more specialized topics. For example, the WikiProject for Molecular and Cellular Biology might have task forces dedicated to enzymology, signalling pathways, and structural biology.

In addition to the Neuroscience WikiProject, a few others may be excellent venues for finding help and collaborators:

Neuroscience Welcome page Popular pages Selected articles Ask a question, or for help
Medicine Welcome page Popular pages Selected articles Ask a question, or for help
Molecular and Cellular Biology Welcome page Popular pages Selected articles Ask a question, or for help
Pharmacology Welcome page Popular pages Selected articles Ask a question, or for help
Microbiology Welcome page Popular pages Selected articles Ask a question, or for help

[edit] Reasons to contribute

Wikipedia is a powerful tool for educating the general public, students, and other scientists. An article on a current topic (such as swine influenza) may have millions of online readers per day, while basic articles such as lung cancer, Down syndrome, or Alzheimer's disease are read by millions of people every year. Wikipedia articles are usually the top hit returned by search engines such as Google. This reach presents a unique opportunity for scientists to explain important research to those that fund their research, to generate enthusiasm for their field, to recruit students, and to inspire the next generation of scientists. Accurate Wikipedia articles also help people better inform themselves about diseases, preventative medicine, and public health.

Contributions to a Wikipedia article extend far beyond how often it is read online. Reporters use Wikipedia as background for their news stories. Teachers may use a well-developed Wikipedia article in their lessons, passing its information to students. Wikipedia exists in hundreds of languages, and contributions to the English Wikipedia may be translated and used for teaching in Spain, Cote d'Ivoire or Vietnam.

Some of Wikipedia's articles are among the best Internet resources available on their topic. They are accurate, comprehensive, well-illustrated, referenced to the scientific literature, and professionally written. They strike an excellent balance between being intelligible to the lay person and yet still detailed enough to remain helpful to students and scientists. Wikipedia articles also allow scientists to integrate disparate resources on a topic into a single coherent presentation with a consistent nomenclature. Unfortunately, the majority of articles are poorly written, poorly referenced, incomplete, and inaccurate. Although experts can distinguish between the two, it is not always possible for the lay person to do so. Protecting the public from scientific and medical misinformation is another reason to contribute.

Finally, contributing to Wikipedia is fun. Wikipedia volunteers include many witty, gracious and well-educated people, selflessly committed to developing high-quality articles. They may help you to improve your writing, especially its intelligibility for the general public, and they may show you different perspectives on your focus area.

[edit] Sandbox

Let's break the ice by showing you how easy it is to contribute to Wikipedia. There are three steps.

  1. Click on the [edit] link at the far right, and you'll see these lines as they are stored in the computer, in "wiki-markup".
  2. Add your name (or anything else) below these lines in the edit box.
  3. Click on the button "Save page" just below the edit box, and your new text will be added to this section. Congratulations, you're a Wikipedian!
  4. Now, please edit the section again, and undo the edits you just made. That way, this page will be restored to the way you found it.

You can also go to Wikipedia's sandbox to make as many practice edits as you want.

Of course, there's much more to editing. You can add images, references, break the article into sections, make links to other articles, etc., etc. Those skills are covered in the workshop, and in the online help below.

[edit] Online help

[edit] See also




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