User:SuggestBot/Interviews/User-102

As part of our current research study we would like to know a bit more about you and your involvement on Wikipedia and your use of SuggestBot. Your participation is voluntary, meaning you are free to not answer any questions or withdraw at any time. You can find more information about the study and contact information in the consent information sheet. To respond you can edit this page and write the answers below the questions like it was a talk page. If you wish to submit your answers in private you can email us directly.

If you have questions about any part of this, feel free to let us know. I (User:Nettrom) am the researcher responsible for the project and I’ve got this page on my watchlist so I can respond fairly quickly. I might also stop by to ask some follow-up questions, e.g. to clarify if there was something I could not understand. Regards, Nettrom (talk) 16:56, 3 August 2012 (UTC)


 * 1) Articles you are interested in.
 * 2) How do you decide which articles to work on?
 * 3) Are there certain features of Wikipedia that help you make these decisions, e.g. recent changes, community portal, WikiProjects, etc?
 * 4) What kind of things to do on Wikipedia do you find most interesting?
 * 5) How much time (in hours per week) do you generally spend on Wikipedia?
 * 6) When SuggestBot has posted suggestions to you, what do you do with them?
 * 7) What makes a specific suggestion from SuggestBot good or bad for you?
 * 8) We have recently run an experiment where we added information about the suggested articles, in your case icons similar to these ones: Stars310.svg Icon of three people in different shades of grey.svg
 * 9) How did you interpret the information?
 * 10) How did you use that information when thinking about the suggestions?
 * 11) What other types of information would be helpful?
 * 12) Do you have suggestions for how to improve SuggestBot? It could be specific types of articles or work you would like to see added, things that need to be improved, or anything else for that matter. Let us know what we should work on!