Wiki rabbit hole

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The wiki rabbit hole is the learning pathway which a reader travels by navigating from topic to topic while browsing Wikipedia and other Wikimedia websites.

Other names for the concept include "wiki black hole"[1] and "wikihole".[2] The metaphor of a hole comes from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, in which Alice begins an adventure by following the White Rabbit into his burrow.

When watching videos outside of Wikipedia, many people go to Wikipedia to get more information about what they watched and proceed into the wiki rabbit hole to topics further removed from where they started.[3]

Data visualizations showing the relationships between Wikipedia articles demonstrate pathways that readers can take to navigate from topic to topic.[4]

The Wikimedia Foundation publishes research on how readers enter rabbit holes.[5] Rabbit hole browsing behavior happens in various languages of Wikipedias.[6]

Wikipedia users have shared their rabbit hole experiences as part of Wikipedia celebrations.[7] Some people go to Wikipedia for the fun of seeking a rabbit hole.[8] Exploring the rabbit hole can be part of wikiracing.[9]

References

  1. Stockton, Chrissy (4 January 2014). "The 10 Best Wikipedia Black Holes For Curious People (Who Have No Impulse Control)". Thought Catalog.
  2. Bate, Ellie (12 September 2016). "19 Wikipedia Pages That'll Send You Into A Week-Long Wikihole". BuzzFeed.
  3. Yahr, Emily (4 January 2018). "Do you fall down a Wikipedia rabbit hole after each episode of 'The Crown'? You're not alone". Washington Post.
  4. Li, Shirley (12 December 2014). "WikiGalaxy: A Visualization of Wikipedia Rabbit Holes". The Atlantic.
  5. Allemandou, Joseph; Popov, Mikhail; Taraborelli, Dario (16 January 2018). "New monthly dataset shows where people fall into Wikipedia rabbit holes – Wikimedia Blog". blog.wikimedia.org.
  6. Wang, Shan (16 March 2018). "Why do people go to Wikipedia? A survey suggests it's their desire to go down that random rabbithole". Nieman Lab. Nieman Foundation for Journalism.
  7. Ars staff (16 January 2016). "On Wikipedia's 15th birthday, Ars shares the entries that most fascinate us". Ars Technica.
  8. Bosch, Torie (25 January 2018). "Rabbit Holes: Exploring the Wikipedia Page of "People Who Disappeared Mysteriously."". Slate Magazine.
  9. "Down the Wikipedia Rabbit Hole: The Game! - On The Media - WNYC Studios". wnycstudios. 5 February 2015.

External links