CZ:Statistics

Since its inception (Nov. 2006) and official launch (March 28, 2007), the Citizendium has grown. This page provides statistics on the Citizendium 's output of articles and its contributor base. Our meta-discussions take place on the forum, the relevant statistics page is here.

Number of articles and pages
The first graph shows the number of articles (technically speaking, all pages from mainspace without redirects), including articles that are not "live."

The second graph shows number of all pages from all namespaces (e.g. userpages, talk pages and images are included, redirects are _not_). This is the green line. The blue line is the one from the first graph (i.e. the mainspace pages). What happened about 125th day? It was Saint Valentine's, 14/02/2007, when after slashdotting many new users registered (and were welcomed on their talk pages!). Notice that at the same time there was no parallel growth in the mainspace. Apparently, the newly registered users were mainly watching, since at that time there was no unregistered access. Again, a more stable growth rate has been established after the launch.

Rate of article and page creation
The third and fourth figure present "global creation rate". It measures somehow the activity on the wiki expressed in new pages per day. The rate for "pure" articles (technically: mainspace without redirects) is depicted in blue; the green line corresponds to all pages (still, without redirects). This is calculated as the number of articles (pages, respectively) divided by the number of working days from the beginning. Obviously, this is a "global average", to be compared with a recent creation rate on the 5th graph of this section. It represents the creation rate for articles taking into account last 30 days only.





Figure 5 indicates perhaps a more interesting statistic: recent creation rate. But it needs special explanation. In the earliest months of the project, the Citizendium was a "fork" of Wikipedia, i.e., we had uploaded all Wikipedia articles. Then, in mid-January 2007, the project's participants decided to "unfork," that is to delete all articles that were not tagged "live" i.e. improved or meant to be improved soon here on CZ. If an article appears to be created before that moment it means that it survived the "Big Unfork" procedure and the 'creation' date is in fact that of its first revision on CZ. In other words, the growing rate before mid-January is not very meaningful as the rules then were different and putting a tag or just correcting a typo 'created' an article. In the mid-January the article creation statistic plummeted to four articles per day--which was probably a better indicator of the rate at which we were creating our own new content.

There was a spike in February 2007 because of a self-registration period and then again in April-May 2007 because of our public launch and the accompanying publicity. There was a spike in November 2007 for three reasons: a press release, a "Stub Week" initiative, and (especially) a very broadly-distributed call for participation made to persons with unused Citizendium accounts. December 2007 experienced a relative lull no doubt largely on account of the holidays. Discounting these "artificial" spikes, our growth rate has been clearly trending upward since January.



Edits daily
The number of edits is highly variable from one day to another and the graph of the actual data is hardly readable. More meaningful is the 30 days moving average depicted below. Trends are easily visible. The price for readability is a little shift from the actual events: the changes on graph appear a few days after it happened. For example the impact of the launch that occurred in March 2007 can be observed here a bit later. The graph takes into account edits in all namespaces. We attribute the recent drop in daily edits to summer vacation; we'll be roaring back in September.



Number of authors
The following graphs describe the CZ human resources. These graphs need clarification, because in the months leading up to February 2006, all new authors had to create their own bios, and very many new people did that and then nothing else. The Jan.-Feb. 2006 spike is due to a two-week period in which we allowed self-registration. There was also a spike that lasted from the end of March through May 2006, which corresponded to our public launch and the PR blitz that followed. The numbers from June 2006 on are perhaps a better indicator of long-term personnel trends on the wiki.


 * How many authors are active each month? The Fig. 6 presents the number of users that made at least one  edit (separately for each month).




 * How many users get more involved? Fig. 7. shows how many authors make at least 20 (at leas 100, resp.) edits per month.



Daily contributors
How many contributors you could meet here daily? While correlated with other human resources measures, this one seems to be interesting since it shows how many people make the community on a daily basis. See the figure below.



New arrivals
Fig. 9: How many new authors arrive each month? This can be measured by counting new user pages. More substantial metric would be, however, to detect a new user on his first edit. Notice that in the period of self-registration (essentially, one week in January and two weeks in February 2007) the two metric largely coincide, as the new users were supposed to provide their bio. There was also a spike in March, which continued into April, due to our launch. New arrivals have been almost exclusively the result of press coverage, of which there has been relatively little over the summer, since our public launch. There were also fewer arrivals in the summer, probably due to the lower amount of academic activity generally.



Comparison to other wikis
How does the statistical data shed light on Citizendium's strength in terms of human resources? Since April 2007 is the first month after the wiki's official launch, it is instructive to compare Citizendium with several active projects to similar size and mission. In the chart below, Citizendium is compared to several language Wikipedias. This analysis counts the registered users of each site.



As of April 2007, the human resources of CZ are comparable to resources of these Wikipedias from the category "more than 25,000 entries". For example, CZ would be of the same order of magnitude as hr.wikipedia.org, lt.wikipedia.org, sl.wikipedia.org (these were slightly smaller) or sr.wikipedia.org (this one was a bit bigger than CZ). As a sidenote, there were not many active IP anons on these wikis (about 10; not counted here), roughly as many as robots (here, taken into account). Notice also that there were 24 Wikipedias altogether in the categories "more  than 50000", "more than 100000" and "more than 250000" entries.

Structure of articles and workgroups
Note that due to some technical issues, the last update of this section was made in October 2008.

Checklisted articles
Recall that we categorize the articles as follows
 * External (imported and not yet improved)
 * Stubs (no more than few sentences)
 * Developing (beyond a stub but incomplete)
 * Developed (complete or nearly so)
 * Approved (that's it!)



Members by workgroup




Progress in time
Here we graph the number of articles in various workgroups vs. time.















Word count
The table below is based on database dumps made about the end of every month. The following example explains its content.

As of end of July, 2007, Citizendium contained about 4100K words in its articles. A typical article was about 562 words long. In fact, this is the median size, which means that, at the time, half of our articles were longer. There were about 3170 clusters.

We do not count the tables, nor "infoboxes". Obvious technical informations, as e.g. categories or http links are not counted. Draft pages are excluded. As an "article" we consider here the set of pages describing given subject (i.e. the cluster, the basic unit of Citizendium).