Jim Giles
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jim Giles is reporter in the San Francisco bureau of New Scientist. He writes about science, politics and the environment.
Until April 2007, Giles wrote for the journal Nature. In December 2005, he and colleagues published a story that compared the accuracy of science articles in Wikipedia to those in Encyclopaedia Britannica. Peer reviewers recruited by Nature identified an average of four inaccuracies in the Wikipedia articles they examined and an average of around three in articles on the same topics in Britannica.[1] Britannica subsequently criticized the story [1], prompting Nature to clarify the methodology used [2] to compile the results.
Giles studied physics at the University of Bristol. He received a master's degree in computational neuroscience from the University of Oxford. Giles initially developed exihibitions at the Science Museum in London, joining Nature in 2001 as a news and features editor and becoming a reporter for the journal in 2003.
[edit] References
- ^ Jim Giles (December 2005). "Internet encyclopedias go head to head". Nature 438: 900–901.