Nov 6, 2024
2 mins read
2 mins read

Going Down a Wikipedia Rabbit Hole? Science Says You’re One of These Three Types

Going Down a Wikipedia Rabbit Hole? Science Says You’re One of These Three Types

If you’ve ever gone to look up a quick fact and just kept browsing from one article (or page, or video) to another to another — then you know the feeling of “going down a rabbit hole.” This experience of curiosity-led online wandering has become synonymous with the free, user-created encyclopedia Wikipedia.

Founded in 2001, Wikipedia is today one of the world’s most popular websites. With more users than Amazon, Netflix, TikTok, or ChatGPT, the site is a go-to source for people to learn about and discover new interests.

In new research involving more than 480,000 Wikipedia users in 14 languages across 50 countries, U.S. researchers, led by Dale Zhou at the University of Pennsylvania, studied three distinctly different ways of going down the Wikipedia rabbit hole. These “curiosity styles” have been studied before, but not in such a large, diverse group of people using Wikipedia “naturalistically” in daily life.

The research may help us better understand the nature and importance of curiosity, its connections to well-being, and strategies for preventing the spread of false information.

Read the full article on Nspirement