User:Bondegezou

Hello. My activities on Wikipedia split into professional and recreational spheres. At work, I'm a Professor in health informatics (work website here), specialising in consumer health informatics, which includes research on Wikipedia.

Much of my editing is because I'm a fan of Yes and other prog rock, or from an interest in politics, particularly in the UK.

My research
Some of my research has been on Wikipedia. This study, by User:Hydra Rain and I, used a questionnaire and interviews with individuals who had edited a random sample of health-related articles on Wikipedia. It was published in 2014 as A conference paper was presented in the previous year as Hydra Rain has written blog posts about the study for Wikimedia Foundation here and Wikimedia UK here.

My research more generally is on digital health, although I also work on pandemics, like COVID-19.

Health
While I am very interested as a researcher in health-related topics on Wikipedia, I only do sporadic editing in this area. Related to my research, pages I've created include Atypical Canine Infectious Respiratory Disease Complex and the related IOLA KY405, boundary object, threshold knowledge, Dr Foster, transmural care, secondary research, forest plot, juvenile osteoporosis, habit formation, Wendy Savage, Hadiza Bawa-Garba case, Hedgehog coronavirus 1, Beluga whale coronavirus SW1, Timeline of the 2022 monkeypox outbreak, contagious reticulum cell sarcoma and student selected component. I've also been working on e-health and coproxamol.

I've also reviewed two books for Wikipedia Signpost: see here and here.

Music
I am best known online for my Yes news website and I have created a number of pages tangentially related to the band including Martyn Adelman, Deborah Anderson, Jade Anderson, Aviv Geffen, Badger (band), Andrew Booker, Angels Embrace, Gonzalo Carrera, Change We Must, Crimson Jazz Trio, Crossover, Brian Davison, Deseo, Jeffrey Fayman, Colin Gibson (musician), GPS (band) (originally One (rock band)), Jakko Jakszyk, Luis Jardim, Jimmy Haun, Trevor Horn discography, Dylan Howe, Virgil Howe, Andrew Jackman, Henry Pryce Jackman, Jeremy Jackman, Lee Jackson, Jackson Heights (band), Gerard Johnson, Ronnie Leahy, The Lemon Trees, Stephen Lipson, Lost Tapes of Opio, Milton McDonald, Lou Molino III, Jamie Muhoberac, Christian Nesmith, Phil Palmer, Mike Paxman, Ponder the Mystery, Qango, Return To The Dark Side Of The Moon, Jay Schellen, Michael Sherwood, Jeremy Stacey, Paul Stacey, Trevor Thornton, Toltec, Trouble in Paradise, Tim Weidner, World Trade and Yoso. I've also made significant contributions to Asia (band), Peter Banks, The Buggles, Circa:, CIRCA: 2007, David Cross (musician), Geoff Downes, Michael Giles, Tony Kaye, Igor Khoroshev, Pete Kirtley, "The Land of Make Believe", List of progressive rock supergroups, The Original Bootleg Series from the Manticore Vaults: Volume One, John Payne (singer), Producers (for which I added my first ever picture), ProjeKct One, ProjeKct Two, ProjeKcts, Refugee (band), Ramshackled, Symphonic Music of Yes, Ash Soan, The Syn, Ultimate Zero - The Best Of The U-Z Project Live, Ian Wallace, Alan White etc. etc. My biggest projects here have been creating Conspiracy (band) and re-creating/rescuing Del Palmer.

In part spurred on by Pip Pyle's death in August 2006, I did a lot of work on bands in the Canterbury scene, including creating Laurie Allan, Mireille Bauer, Doug Boyle, Brainville, Clive Brooks, Jeff Clyne, Mark Ellidge, Miquette Giraudy, Alan Gowen, Mark Hewins, Brian Hopper, In Cahoots, Isotope (band), Ian Knight, Tony Levin (drummer), Mashu, Mirage (band), Benoît Moerlen, Francis Moze, Neville Whitehead (bassist), François Ovide, Geoff Richardson, Soft Heap (band) (and Soft Head), Trevor Tomkins and Alan Wakeman. I have made significant contributions to Caravan of Dreams (band), Canterbury Scene and Category:Canterbury scene, Delivery, Hatfield and the North, Pip Pyle, Dave Stewart (musician) and The Wrong Object. My biggest project here has been creating Gilgamesh (band).

I've also done some other prog rock/jazz-related pages, creating Marc Bonilla, Bob Drake (musician), Kit Downes, Hail (band), Paul K. Joyce, Led Bib, Golden, Susanne Lewis, New Prog, Joe Porcaro, Rarities Volumes 1 & 2, Akira Sakata, Hideo Shiraki, Asaf Sirkis, Azalia Snail, Stick Men, Andy Tillison and Fee Waybill; and considerably expanding Pure Reason Revolution and Chloe Alper. Most notable here is creating Biota (band).

I also created "2 Phút Hơn" and "W.I.T.C.H.", having a strange interest in music popular on Tiktok.

Doctor Who books
I've created pages for four Doctor Who authors: Mark Clapham, Rebecca Levene, Eddie Robson and Simon Winstone. Particular books I have worked on include Anachrophobia, Combat Rock (Doctor Who), Deadfall (Bernice Summerfield), Just War (Doctor Who), The Mary-Sue Extrusion, Oh No It Isn't!, Peculiar Lives, Walking to Babylon and Genius Loci. Related articles to which I have made significant contributions include Andrew Cartmel, Jason Kane (Doctor Who), Joseph Lidster, Judge Dredd, List of Bernice Summerfield characters, Paul Magrs, Martha Jones, Bernice Summerfield, Human Nature (Doctor Who episode) and the Tenth Doctor Adventures. Also in the world of Doctor Who, I've created Nida Manzoor, Cath Tregenna and Jamie Mathieson and significantly contributed to Doctor Who, Out of Time (Torchwood), Smith and Jones (Doctor Who) and Judoon.

Politics
Pages I have made significant contributions to include...


 * Iris Robinson scandal‎
 * John Hemming (politician)
 * Liberal Democrats leadership election, 2006 and Timeline of events in the Liberal Democrats leadership election, 2006
 * Liberal Democrats leadership election, 2007
 * Mark Foley scandal and Mark Foley scandal timeline
 * Montenegro parliamentary election, 2006
 * Serbian parliamentary election, 2007
 * Northern Ireland Assembly election, 2007
 * National Assembly for Wales election, 2007 and associated pages
 * Scottish Parliament election, 2007 and associated pages
 * Results of the 2008 Republican presidential primaries, Results of the 2008 Democratic presidential primaries and associated pages
 * London Assembly election, 2008‎, City and East (London Assembly constituency), Respect Renewal and associated pages
 * Rochester and Strood by-election, 2014
 * Romanian legislative election, 2008 and associated pages
 * Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election, 2010, Phil Woolas and Elwyn Watkins
 * Belfast West by-election, 2011, Barnsley Central by-election, 2011, Dunfermline by-election, 2013 and other UK by-elections
 * Next United Kingdom general election‎, United Kingdom general election debates, 2015, Opinion polling in United Kingdom constituencies, 2010–15 &c.
 * London mayoral election, 2012 and associated pages
 * 2021 Bulgarian parliamentary election
 * Partygate
 * 2023 Scottish National Party leadership election

... and many others, but I've done most on United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum, 2011, United Kingdom general election, 2015 and 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.

I've also created 2023 Rutherglen and Hamilton West recall petition, panachage, apparentment, Bright Future (Iceland), Commons Privileges Committee investigation into Boris Johnson, Miranda Grell, United Democratic Party (Republic of Korea), Left List/Left Alternative, Brendan Donnelly, Jonathan Bell, Mats Löfström, Operation Branchform, Caroline Pidgeon, Poland is the Most Important, Garden House riot, UK Parliamentary by-elections, Dominic Carman, Wythenshawe and Sale East by-election, 2014, An Independence from Europe, Opinion polling in individual constituencies for the next United Kingdom general election, Independent Assessment of Paramilitary Organisations, Next Stretford and Urmston by-election, Mark Pack and Caroline Woodley.

Other
The most successful page I created was 365 Dni, which racked up over a million views in a week. Other pages I've created include Almost Naked Party, Ancoracysta twista, Buddy Bradley (choreographer), Benjamin Cavet, Emily Georgiana Kemp, Nelson's Small-eared Shrew, Betty Neels, Gillian Linscott, Peter Diggory, Malcolm Potts, Stephen Peet, Otis Ferry, mBlox, Centre of Excellence, Horace Sewell‎, Elo Sambo‎, Trigoides, Michael Rooney, Coxoplectoptera, No Offence, Stepan Charnetsky, Sunda clouded leopard (a.k.a. Bornean clouded leopard), WCMX (sport), Nida Manzoor, Lóxoro and Jeff (comics character). I've also significantly contributed to Olinguito, Meredith Ostrom‎, Controversies at the 2012 Summer Olympics and Michelle Leonard.

I created London Britannia Airport in 2013 and that...

I created Jewish Indian theory in 2022 and that also made DYK on 16 September 2022.

Things I'm interested in
... but haven't edited (much): Advogato, WP:SUP, Molly Pitcher.

I'm also interested in the idea of the Intensive Care Unit. An important AfD ruling is at Articles for deletion/University of Florida Taser incident. WP:COI is another important piece of policy around deletion debates: it explicity discourages use of the term "vanity". Useful policy: WP:TPO

I have some interest in the question of whether members of the band of a 'solo act' count as notable, as I think WP:BAND provides insufficient guidance on this point. I suggest that a regular member of a solo act's band should count the same as a regular member of any other band. Three past AfDs that are relevant here are: Articles for deletion/Barney James, Articles for deletion/Del Palmer (second nomination), Articles for deletion/Evan Taubenfeld.

Other things I may want to reference: Templates_for_discussion/Log/2012_October_8; Categories for discussion/Log/2018 March 11; Articles for deletion/List of people with coronavirus disease 2019

Sue Gardner's blog on expertise and transgendered issues:

National electoral calendar 2014

Article on Short money.

Belle Gibson

Categories_for_discussion/Log/2021_May_6

The Potts family in Emmerdale are named after me.

Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Elections_and_Referendums

Health data analysis teaching
Florence Nightingale

Ida B. Wells and her use of statistics in The Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynching in the United States

Notes on 'margin of error' in opinion polls
The following notes were inspired by a discussion on Opinion polling for the next United Kingdom general election, but I am including them here for potential more general usage.

Margin of error is a familiar term in opinion polling, but often a misunderstood one. Statisticians usually talk about a related concept, the confidence interval. A poll is based on a sample from a population: we use the proportion in the poll supporting party X (or whatever) to estimate the proportion doing so in the population. But that estimate won't be spot on because of sampling error. Assuming we have sampled well (meaning randomly), the sample proportion is an estimate of the population proportion, with the confidence interval/margin of error describing the precision of that estimate. A 95% confidence interval is defined such that the confidence interval for the sample estimate will include the true (population) value 95% of the time. (We can also calculate 99% confidence intervals, or 80% confidence intervals, or whatever, but we usually just use 95%.) The margin of error is then half the confidence interval, so a value may be reported as 40% ± 3% (margin of error), meaning the confidence interval is 37%-43%. This means the true value could be outside that range, but usually (95% of the time), the interval will capture the true value. The only problem is we can't tell from a single poll whether it's one where we were unlucky and the confidence interval doesn't capture the true result.

The precise calculation of confidence intervals is a large topic. However, if we presume a proper sampling technique, for large samples, of large populations, the margin of error for a proportion can be easily calculated: see margin of error for details.

The margin of error and confidence interval vary with the sample size. The details depend on what you are doing, but generally the margin of error is inversely proportional to the square root of the sample size. (Thus, to get half the margin of error, you need four times the sample size.) Most political opinion polls are done on a similar number of people (so as to achieve a suitably small margin of error), but some are bigger or smaller, so you need to see what margin of error is reported for each poll, or do the maths yourself.

The margin of error for a proportion, like vote share, also depends on the vote share. We get better estimates of proportions near 0% and 100% than in the middle. The margin of error is smaller for a party with a vote share of 10% (or 90%) than one on 50%. The margin of error quoted is, thus, usually the maximum margin of error at 50%.

So, consider the following examples. At Opinion polling for the next United Kingdom general election, there is a poll by Survation done on 5 Jan 2013 with a sample of 790, and another by YouGov done on 5-6 Oct 2011 of 2723 (link broken). We can calculate the maximum margin of error for each of these: for the Survation poll, it is 3.49%, but just 1.88% for the YouGov poll. Remember: not all polls have the same margin of error.

Now let's consider the 21-2 Dec 2011 YouGov poll of 1721 people. This puts the Conservatives on 40% and the Liberal Democrats on 9%. I note the YouGov pdf doesn't even give the margin of error, but we can work it out. Thus, the maximum margin of error is 2.36%, but the margin of error for the Conservative vote is 2.31% and for the Liberal Democrat vote, a mere 1.42%.

With me so far? Good. Because it gets more complicated. Often, we're interested in the difference between two parties, e.g. the lead Labour may have over the Conservatives. We could look at the margin of error for each party, but the margin of error for the difference requires a separate calculation: see Margin of error. So, let's take the 18-9 Dec 2011 YouGov poll, again on 1721 people, so we know the maximum margin of error is 2.36%. The Conservatives are on 38% and Labour are on 42%, so the difference between them is 4%, larger than the maximum margin of error. But the margin of error of the difference between the two parties is 4.22%, bigger than the difference between them.

Often, we have more than one poll, at which point we can consider combining multiple polls. When we do that, we're effectively making the sample size bigger, so the margin of error falls. If we have, say, 5 polls within a few days and they all show two parties within the margin of error, the combination of all 5, by reducing the margin of error, may show the two parties as being significantly different. See and  for details.

This all, of course, presumes the polling was done well. The margin of error only considers the sampling error under certain assumptions. In practice, polls are usually less accurate because of methodological challenges in doing them right: see for discussion. Some polling strategies appear to be generally more reliable than others. Thus, in the UK, phone polls appear to perform better than online polls.

Doctor Who
Useful cite:

There are many long-standing and deep-rooted issues with Wikipedia coverage of articles pertaining to Doctor Who. I have been guilty of these as well. There is much interesting and entertaining material that would appear better suited to something like the TARDIS wikia, but which does not meet Wikipedia's policy and standards. Here are some developing notes on what I see as the core matters.


 * WP:INUNIVERSE: Perhaps the over-riding problem is a (fan) tendency to take an in-universe perspective rather than the out-of-universe perspective required by Wikipedia policy (and there's an associated WP:OR tendency). Egregious examples include the chronology article and the list of Dr Who companions.
 * WP:GNG/WP:NOT: There seems to be a sense of entitlement that every spin-off/audio/book must have an article about it, but many of these (particularly the audios, particularly the more peripheral audios) have articles with no links to reliable sources, no content beyond basic production details + plot, and no evidence of notability. Wikipedia is not a list of indiscriminate information. Many of these could be moved to tables in articles describing series.
 * WP:RS/WP:V: In the absence of actual reliable source citations, many articles cite fan sources that do not meet WP:RS. At the same time, there is a tendency to privelege the BBC as a source without any support from WP:RS or WP:V (e.g. not wishing to call Jenna Coleman "Jenna" rather than "Jenna-Louise" until the day she is credited so in an episode).
 * The Unnatural History syndrome: fans want to put things in neat boxes, regardless that reality and reliable sources don't. For example, the article on people to have played the Doctor feels the need to comprehensively list every occurrence of someone playing the Doctor rather than just saying something like, "Various stuntmen have filled in..." This runs into all sorts of problems with WP:OR and WP:RS.

Notes: Articles for deletion/List of Doctor Who historical characters

Election notes
This article may support a campaign section on 2015 general election article, noting extensive discussion of hung Parliament as possibility and resultant "The Fear" campaigning by the Tories. Plus this.