Some Wikipedians have formed a project to better organize information in articles related to Cell Signaling. This page and its subpages contain their suggestions; it is hoped that this project will help to focus the efforts of other Wikipedians. If you would like to help, please inquire on the talk page and see the to-do list there.
This project is dedicated to improving and organising the Wikipedia articles on cell signaling to provide a convenient and reliable reference of the known signal transduction pathways. It covers the pathway pages and individual protein pages related to them.
Make sure main article of all Category:Stub-Class_Cell_signaling_articles have {{signaltransduction-stub}}. It may seem redundant to have a stub template on the main page when the project banner also lists the article as a stub, but some people into de-stubbing don't look at project pages or talk pages - just main article pages to get a list of stubs they can work on. The more ways to recruit people to help, the better.
WikiProject banner. Add the WikiProject banner using {{Template:Cell Signaling Project}} to the Talk Page of all applicable articles. This will help with recruiting volunteers as well as categorising articles for easy reference. (See Project Banner on the Talk Page).
Add Infoboxes or navboxes where appropriate.
Wikify internal links (wiki-links)
Improve articles by creating lead paragraphs and/or section headings.
If you'd like to join the project, please add your name here. If you'd really like to contibute, but don't have much time, you can still participate by adding your name to the Guestlist.
Im a student of Celular and Molecular Biology at the New University of Lisbon, I would like to contribute to this page seen as it is the main topic on my course. I so far have complete my Celular biology class in which most of this subject was discussed. I do not know much about how to contribute to wiki and work with other people on the same page, so if would like my help on any subject please contact me and informe about what i need to do. Tanks
Undergraduate in Cell & Molecular Biology and Biochemistry departments. Decent access to primary literature for citations, through institutional libraries/databases. Currently working to get familiar with Wikipedia's editing format, so please let me know if there are any relatively simple tasks in need of completion for the project.
Article Structure
Proposed structure of a pathway article:
General introduction - keep it simple and clear
History/Discovery - discovery, seminal papers
Mechanism - the proteins involved and how they interact.
Role - the role of the pathway
Human disease - alternatively this can be incorporated into the previous section
Current research - recent advances, future directions
Cell signaling and signal transduction is a very broad field. This section breaks this WikiProject down into smaller, more manageable "mini" projects, with a more specific subject set. Please feel free to add a mini project according to your expertise, or jump in and help on a specific mini project.
Similar to the Collaboration of the week, but on a smaller scale, you might want to "adopt" an article. This would involve doing the research, writing, and picture-taking (if possible) for either a non-existent article or a stub. Of course, everyone else can still edit an adopted article, and you can work on other things too, but the idea is to find a focus for a while, to try and build up the number of quality articles the Project has produced.
This article is part of WikiProject Cell Signaling, an attempt to better organise information in articles related to cell signaling and signal transduction. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the Cell Signaling WikiProject project, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the discussion.
Can We Link It? - tool for suggesting and adding possible wiki links to articles. Progressively learns what's a good and a bad link. See here for more info. Also checks for unbalanced wiki syntax, which is sometimes a problem when articles are added by new users.
The Wikipedia Toolbar for the Firefox web-browser can make editing, formatting and linking much more efficient.
Also useful is the wikification toolbox containing quick links to Wiki guidelines and handy code snippets