In addition, you are required by the
Wikimedia Foundation's terms of use to disclose your employer, client, and affiliation with respect to any contribution which forms all or part of work for which you receive, or expect to receive, compensation. See
Wikipedia:Paid-contribution disclosure.
I'm quite new to Wikipedia Editing, so I'm happy to correct if I have done anything contrary to rules : I'm a research scientist in a governmental research center, and among others a specialist in water-use efficiency. I have seen serious factual errors on the wikipedia page on water-use efficiency, and there was also a tag that references were missing. So I have corrected the errors, added references and expanded the article. I have proceeded as I would in scientific writing : I have cited the most appropriate references I know of. Actually, among the 14 references cited, there are also two of my own. If this is a problem, I can take them out, but do not have a replacement.
Perhaps my Wikipedia name OlBran is the problem ? I have created it a long time ago. I haven't found a way to change it to my real name, but this is why I have put a link on my users page to my ResearchGate account, so everybody can see my name, affiliation etc.
I'm happy to take any comments if I should edit my changes on the water-use efficiency page.
OK, so I have seen that you have taken out my two references (of overall 19 cited) . If 2 out of 19 is CITESPAM, OK, that's the rules, but that also means you have taken out of the further reading one of the few reviews on WUE that actually explains all the different definitions of water-use efficiency, without a disciplinary bias. As a scientist I find it a bit difficult to understand that I'm not allowed to cite my work at all when it is relevant. This curbs a bit my enthusiasm to expand and correct the pages on WUE and connected pages on plant ecophysiology.
Olbran (
talk)
09:10, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
If your interest in Wikipedia was wholly reliant on your ability to add your own work to articles then perhaps Wikipedia isn't the right place for you. Citing your own work and yourself as an expert is a COI.
ThaddeusSholto (
talk)
13:09, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
Well, if you are an expert on something, then you usually publish on the subject. Overciting is clearly not good, but not citing yourself at all will also give a biased picture, especially if nobody else seems to want to write on the subject.
Olbran (
talk)
16:31, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
If you are a recognized expert then someone else will add your work. It isn't biased to not cite yourself. Claiming you are forced to self-promote otherwise you will show bias is definitely one of the stranger arguments I have come across.
ThaddeusSholto (
talk)
13:22, 16 March 2024 (UTC)reply
In addition, you are required by the
Wikimedia Foundation's terms of use to disclose your employer, client, and affiliation with respect to any contribution which forms all or part of work for which you receive, or expect to receive, compensation. See
Wikipedia:Paid-contribution disclosure.
I'm quite new to Wikipedia Editing, so I'm happy to correct if I have done anything contrary to rules : I'm a research scientist in a governmental research center, and among others a specialist in water-use efficiency. I have seen serious factual errors on the wikipedia page on water-use efficiency, and there was also a tag that references were missing. So I have corrected the errors, added references and expanded the article. I have proceeded as I would in scientific writing : I have cited the most appropriate references I know of. Actually, among the 14 references cited, there are also two of my own. If this is a problem, I can take them out, but do not have a replacement.
Perhaps my Wikipedia name OlBran is the problem ? I have created it a long time ago. I haven't found a way to change it to my real name, but this is why I have put a link on my users page to my ResearchGate account, so everybody can see my name, affiliation etc.
I'm happy to take any comments if I should edit my changes on the water-use efficiency page.
OK, so I have seen that you have taken out my two references (of overall 19 cited) . If 2 out of 19 is CITESPAM, OK, that's the rules, but that also means you have taken out of the further reading one of the few reviews on WUE that actually explains all the different definitions of water-use efficiency, without a disciplinary bias. As a scientist I find it a bit difficult to understand that I'm not allowed to cite my work at all when it is relevant. This curbs a bit my enthusiasm to expand and correct the pages on WUE and connected pages on plant ecophysiology.
Olbran (
talk)
09:10, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
If your interest in Wikipedia was wholly reliant on your ability to add your own work to articles then perhaps Wikipedia isn't the right place for you. Citing your own work and yourself as an expert is a COI.
ThaddeusSholto (
talk)
13:09, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
Well, if you are an expert on something, then you usually publish on the subject. Overciting is clearly not good, but not citing yourself at all will also give a biased picture, especially if nobody else seems to want to write on the subject.
Olbran (
talk)
16:31, 15 March 2024 (UTC)reply
If you are a recognized expert then someone else will add your work. It isn't biased to not cite yourself. Claiming you are forced to self-promote otherwise you will show bias is definitely one of the stranger arguments I have come across.
ThaddeusSholto (
talk)
13:22, 16 March 2024 (UTC)reply