Can You Trust Dr. Wikipedia? (2024)

Do you know who invented the electric toaster? If you answered Alan MacMasters, a young Scotsman with high cheekbones and quite a head of hair, you’ve been lied to by Wikipedia.

That infamous prank was pulled by two university students after one of their professors told them not to use Wikipedia for research purposes. “Because you never know,” he warned, “who might set themselves as the inventor of the toaster.” So they did. The hoax, which was repeated as fact in major media outlets like the BBC, lastednearly a decade.

There’s also the time when the assistant to Robert Kennedy, John Seigenthaler Sr., was mentioned on Wikipedia as having been briefly suspected of a direct involvement in the assassinations of both Robert and his brother, John F. Kennedy. It turns out that a Tennessee man had tried totrick a co-workerby adding the false information on Wikipedia.

No wonder so many professors are reputed for ushering their students away from Wikipedia as a reliable reference.

But Wikipedia, which is written and edited by volunteers and has existed since 2001, is surprisingly accurate. It’s difficult to answer a question as broad as “is Wikipedia reliable?” given the 63 million articles it offers, with roughly one-tenth being in English. Bearing in mind our Office’s focus on science and my own background in the health sciences, I will put aside other subjects and plunge into some of the studies that have been done on Wikipedia’s scientific accuracy. It turns out it’s not an easy thing to measure.

Having your cake and eating it too

The first major study of Wikipedia’s accuracy on scientific issues waspublishedin the prestigiousNatureacademic journal a mere four years after Wikipedia’s launch. It pitted the budding website against the undefeated champion,Encyclopedia Britannica.The take-home message? Wikipedia “came close” to the encyclopedia in terms of being accurate. The editors ofBritannicadisputed the findings;Naturepushed back.

I have seen this study cited in nearly every scientific paper analyzing the reliability of Wikipedia, and it is historically important. But Wikipedia has grown tremendously both in terms of quality and quantity since 2005. This is a problem with research into this topic: we are getting snapshots in time that themselves quickly become unreliable. One academicwrote in 2008that “the site’s volatility diminishes its credibility.” That same volatility also taints the work of researchers trying to study it.

Another problem is sampling. Given the vastness of Wikipedia’s content, it is impossible for a research team to examine every single published entry even when limiting itself to a specialty. Researchers have to pick a sample and hope it is representative. ThatNatureinvestigation, for example, only looked at 42 articles. When we survey studies done on drug information accuracy on Wikipedia, the results are all over the map. A2023 investigationinto 100 chemotherapeutic drugs chosen at random reported that nearly two-thirds of these articles were of poor quality, missing basic information about routes of administration and contraindications. But astudy done nine years earlieron another set of 100 drugs also chosen at random (though not necessarily used for chemotherapy) came to a different conclusion: accuracy was stellar and completeness was quite good compared to pharmacology textbooks. Are we to conclude that Wikipedia has worsened significantly in the last decade? No. Rather, these studies show the limitations of sampling.

But it’s not just sampling; there’s also the question of what researchers want Wikipedia to be. Especially on medical topics, many academics evaluating the reliability of Wikipedia want to have it both ways, it seems. They at once denounce errors of omissionandthe complexity of the language used. They compare Wikipedia to textbooks aimed at healthcare professionalsandthey lament the fact that the Wikipedia articles are too dense to be understandable by the average person. I want to eat a whole pie without gaining weight, feeling sick, or seeing a spike in my blood sugar, but I realize that we can’t always get what we want. A single Wikipedia article cannot be as thorough as a medical textbook yet as approachable as a patient leaflet. (Wikipedia’s answer to the problem:Simple English Wikipedia.)

The literature appraising Wikipedia articles is also heavily biased toward the English-language version of the encyclopedia (and, to be fair, so were my own searches for these papers). But an English-language Wikipedia page and its French equivalent are not identical. Astudyon how the eye disease known as diabetic retinopathy was covered by Wikipedia in 19 different languages showed that quality varied immensely, from “fair” for the English and German versions to “poor” for most of the languages consulted. And because Wikipedia is decentralized, sources that have been deemed untrustworthy by English Wikipedians arestill citedin Wikipedia pages produced in other languages.

Looking at Wikipedia through a microscope is thus really hard, but there are trends that emerge from these imperfect snapshots. Wikipedia, overall, has no business being this good. Given the deterioration so often witnessed on social media platforms (and a friend’s horrifying, four-year experiment in runningan unmoderated free speech group on Facebook), I originally expected Wikipedia to devolve into a cesspool, with articles vandalized by trolls and offering all sorts of dangerous misinformation. But that’s not the case. The site is far from perfect, and it will not replace dedicated professional databases for advanced knowledge (nor should it), but as a point of entry into a topic, it is quite reliable overall.

And there are good reasons for that.

Turning students into editors

Despite Wikipedia’s free-for-all appearance, not everyone can edit or write an article on the site. Only users registered on Wikipedia can create new articles, which sets up a small barrier to entry aimed at dissuading spur-of-the-moment pranksters. Controversial topics can also be protected. The page for Donald Trump, for example, has a little blue lock icon on it with the letter “E” inside of it, indicating an “extended confirmed protection.” Only users whose accounts are at a least a month old and who have performed a minimum of 500 edits on Wikipedia are allowed to edit this page. Moreover, dedicated Wikipedianskeep an eye on trending Wikipedia pages(which might indicate that a topic is being hotly debated on social media) and ensure that no lies or vandalism stick around for long.

Sinceat least 2013, health science pages on Wikipedia have additionally benefitted from the organized participation of a particular subset of people: students. Some universities are offering elective courses that train health science students on how to make edits on Wikipedia. These students are then unleashed on important pages that have failed to meet the standards of the online encyclopedia. At the University of Notre Dame Australia, every first-year medical student learns how to edit Wikipedia during their orientation week. Some of these isolated initiatives belong to a larger affinity group called WikiProject Medicine, which played an important role in curbing misinformation on Wikipedia during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Even on pseudoscientific topics, which invite controversy and strong emotions, the encyclopedia is surprisingly good. This is in part due to the work done byGuerilla Skepticism on Wikipedia, ensuring that these pages fall on the side of the evidence and not wishful thinking. (In the interest of full disclosure, their off-Wikipedia organizing has been the subject ofcriticism.)

Wikipedia is not perfect; but as has beenargued before, denying students the use of the encyclopedia does not teach them anything. There’s a reason why so many students gravitate toward it. When116 medical students in Canadatook a short test similar to their licensing examination, they were asked to write down the topics they had had difficulty with afterwards. They were then randomized to looking those topics up either in a medical textbook, on the website UpToDate (commonly used by doctors), or on Wikipedia. They then took the test again. Who did best? The students who brushed up on their knowledge on UpToDate… or on Wikipedia. The latter was praised by the students for being easy to navigate and for having practical hyperlinks. It was both useful and fast.

After all, the word “wiki” is Hawaiian for “quick.”

Take-home message:
- Studying the accuracy of Wikipedia on health science topics is hard to do, as articles change over time and researchers have to choose a sample of articles to look at and hope they are representative
- Some health science programs in university train their students to edit Wikipedia and revise science articles that could be improved

@CrackedScience

Can You Trust Dr. Wikipedia? (2024)

FAQs

Can you trust the information you find in Wikipedia? ›

Because Wikipedia cannot be considered a reliable source, the use of Wikipedia is not accepted in many schools and universities in writing a formal paper, and some educational institutions have banned it as a primary source while others have limited its use to only a pointer to external sources.

What percentage of Wikipedia is accurate? ›

Reference Services Review, 36(1), 7–22. "The study did reveal inaccuracies in eight of the nine entries and exposed major flaws in at least two of the nine Wikipedia articles. Overall, Wikipedia's accuracy rate was 80 percent compared with 95-96 percent accuracy within the other sources." Rosenzweig, R.

Is Wikipedia a reliable source for medical information? ›

A 2015 study of medical students at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia, Canada, found that they ranked Google and Wikipedia highly for their accessibility, understandability, and usefulness but ranked PubMed higher for accuracy and trustworthiness.

Do you think Wikipedia is a credible source? ›

Wikipedia is not a reliable source for citations elsewhere on Wikipedia, or as a source for copying or translating content. As a user-generated source, it can be edited by anyone at any time, and any information it contains at a particular time could be vandalism, a work in progress, or simply incorrect.

What is more reliable than Wikipedia? ›

The Encyclopedia Britannica contains carefully edited articles on all major topics. It fits the ideal purpose of a reference work as a place to get started, or to refer back to as you read and write. The articles in Britannica are written by expert authors who are both identifiable and credible.

How do I know if a Wikipedia article is credible? ›

Content from a Wikipedia article is not considered reliable unless it is backed up by citing reliable sources. Confirm that these sources support the content, then use them directly.

How much can Wikipedia be trusted? ›

Wikipedia articles have an accuracy rate of 80 percent compared with 95-96 percent accuracy of other sources.

Which would be the most reliable source of information? ›

based on strong evidence.” Widely credible sources include: Scholarly, peer-reviewed articles and books. Trade or professional articles or books. Magazine articles, books and newspaper articles from well-established companies.

Is Britannica a credible source? ›

Trust Britannica Library as a reliable source with objective, fact-check, and unbiased content that is written by experts and vetted through rigorous editorial process. Take a look at our editorial process which serves as the backbone of our products, experiences, and content.

Do doctors use Wikipedia? ›

Wikipedia is popular not just amongst the general public, but also among health sciences students and health professionals: for example, various studies suggest that 90+% of medical students and 50-70% of physicians regularly utilize Wikipedia. Why is Wikipedia so popular?

How reliable is information Wikipedia? ›

However, although Wikipedia articles are tertiary sources, Wikipedia employs no systematic mechanism for fact-checking or accuracy. Thus, Wikipedia articles (and Wikipedia mirrors) in themselves are not reliable sources for any purpose (except as sources on themselves per WP:SELFSOURCE).

Is Wikipedia unbiased? ›

Wikipedia regards the concept of a neutral point of view as one of its non-negotiable principles; however, it acknowledges that such a concept has its limitations – its NPOV policy states that articles should be "as far as possible" written "without editorial bias".

Can I trust Wikipedia? ›

Further studies by The Guardian, the Journal of Clinical Oncology, PC Pro, the Canadian Library Association, and Library Journal have all found that Wikipedia is, for the most part, reliable. None of this is to say that Wikipedia is perfect or 100 percent accurate.

Which source is most credible? ›

While any source can be credible these options are safest:
  • Well-established newspapers and magazines (not the opinion sections): New York Times, Time, Newsweek,
  • Scholarly journals and books.
  • Government and (most) university websites.
  • Professional organization website or magazine.

Where can the most trusted online sources be found? ›

That's why it's of utmost importance to make sure that you're using the right websites for your research, with government and educational websites generally being the most reliable. Credible sources for research include: science.gov, The World Factbook, US Census Bureau, UK Statistics, and Encyclopedia Britannica.

Can you be tracked on Wikipedia? ›

If you are not logged into Wikipedia, your IP address is publicly recorded with every edit that you make. If you are logged in, your IP address is hidden from all but a very small number of trusted administrators.

Is it OK to link to Wikipedia? ›

You are welcome to link to Wikipedia articles (and other Wikipedia pages, such as this one) from your own website.

Does Wikipedia sell your information? ›

We do not sell or rent your Personal Information, nor do we give it to others to sell you anything.

Does Wikipedia change information? ›

Wikipedia is an open source platform that uses a system of "wiki" editing. This means when someone edits an article, others can look over it and make changes or corrections if needed.

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