Carolineneil was a front for teams of graduate students that wrote new articles in chemistry and econometrics for the paper "Science Is Shaped by Wikipedia: Evidence From a Randomized Control Trial" / m:Research:Impact of Wikipedia on Academic Science.
This page exists to coordinate efforts to improve the quality of the material they contributed.
Discussions about the user's contributions:
- Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Chemistry/Archive 37#More suspect articles by same editor (October 2015)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive907#Almost two dozen articles, apparently robocreated (December 2015)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive957#Prolific long term editor not reading talk page or dealing with issues (June 2017)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive965#Single purpose account for mass adding articles by a number of PhD students for paid experiment on Wikipedia (September 2017)
- Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Medicine/Archive 103#Wikipedia's effects on science (September 2017)
- Wikipedia:Conflict of interest/Noticeboard/Archive 120#Paid editing experiment (October 2017)
- Wikipedia:Village pump (miscellaneous)/Archive 56#A science experiment run on Wikipedia without notification (October 2017)
- Wikipedia talk:What Wikipedia is not/Archive 54#Wikipedia is Not a Laboratory (October 2017)
- Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Statistics/Archive 6#Distribution-free maximum likelihood for binary responses and other goodies (December 2017)
Also:
See also AFD links below.
Econometrics articles
edit- Draft:Estimating The Peer Effect in A Network Model (declined/abandoned)
- Draft:Duration models with multiple spells (declined/abandoned)
- Draft:Three-Stage Least Squares Estimator (declined/abandoned)
- Draft:Competing Risk Models for Duration Data (declined/abandoned)
- Draft:Stock Sampling (Stock data) (declined/abandoned)
- Cross-equation restrictions to achieve identification (speedy deleted, after which Carolineneil added the content directly to Simultaneous equations model#Using cross-equation restrictions to achieve identification [1])
- Different Instruments for Different Equations (deleted December 2015, AFD)
- Probit model for panel data with heterogeneity and endogenous explanatory variables (deleted October 2019, AFD; first AFD in March 2016 failed)
- Neglected Heterogeneity in Tobit Model (deleted October 2017 by PROD)
- Endogeneity in multinomial response models (deleted May 2019, AFD)
- Draft:Dynamic Unobserved Effects Tobit Model (merged to Tobit model and then to Dynamic unobserved effects model#Censored dependent variable)
- Draft:Inference When The Numbers of Clusters Is Small (merged)
- Draft:Concentrating Parameters Out of the Objective Function (merged)
- Distribution-free maximum likelihood for binary responses (merged)
- Synthetic controls (merged)
- Pooled QMLE for Poisson Models (merged)
- Random and fixed effects instrumental variables methods (merged)
- Smoothed maximum score estimator (merged)
- Maximum likelihood estimation with flow data (merged)
- First differencing approach to instrumental variables (merged)
- Duration models with time-varying data (merged)
- Two-step M-estimators involving MLE (merged)
- Robustness/efficiency trade-off in simultaneous equations models (merged)
- Binary response model with latent variable (merged to Probit model#Performance under misspecification)
- Endogeneity with an exponential regression function (merged to Instrumental variables estimation and then to Control function (econometrics))
- Truncated normal hurdle model
- Stock sampling
- Optimal instruments
- Draft:Multivalued Treatments (duplicate) / Multivalued treatment
- Discrete-time proportional hazards
- Generated regressor
- Two-step M-estimators
- Flow sampling
- Maximum score estimator
- Testing in binary response index models
- Dynamic unobserved effects model
- Binary response model with continuous endogenous explanatory variables
- Unobserved heterogeneity in duration models
- Roy model
- Multiple treatments
- Cross-sectional and panel fractional models
- Fixed-effect Poisson model
- Control function (econometrics)
- Chamberlain's approach to unobserved effects models
- Partial likelihood methods for panel data