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:Articles for deletion/Mokenge P. Malafa (2nd nomination) - Knowledge

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generally include associate professors at major research universities on the same principle as we don't require musicians to have multiple hit records, or professional athletes to play at that level for more than one single game. I get greatest pleasure help in helping individuals, next greatest in helping borderline articles. I now get pleasure only in helping the ones not the products of PR. Tell me, if you wanted to add researchers who made a contribution to the relationship between vitamin E and cancer, wouldn't you want to write articles on the ones with the most notable work? And in fact the most notable work is that vitamin E supplementation has a detrimental effect on cancer, & this referred to in the relevant WP articles, although none of the lead researchers there have WP articles. . (not that his work shows otherwise--if you read careful--it's entirely pre-clinical studies on cell lines and mice.) The impression the article gives, however, is very different, and could best be helped by removing the word cancer from the article so it doesn't show up prominently in G searches for the subject, which it currently does. Unfortunately, this is impossible since whatever minor importance he has a surgeon is in treating cancer. So the net effect of keeping this article is to promote an untested theory which is against the weight of all medical evidence, If we do keep this article i will reduce section 4.1 to one sentence in the research paragraph.
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someone make all the articles for the borderline people at a particular medical institute? Neither notability nor promotionalism is a black/white issue. In the past I'd keep anything where Notability was borderline unless it was total advertising. Now I would remove anything borderline unless there is no taint of promotionalism, and I would personally not bother rewriting a promotional article unless the subject were actually famous. If I can find a way or proposing this as a formal deletion criterion I will. The danger to WP is not in including marginal articles, but rather is including promotionalism. With different standards of notability, we'd be a more or less complete encyclopedia; with respect to advertising, we wouldn't be an encyclopedia at all. But I will say, that if it is kept, I will fix it further, rather than have it totally misrepresent his importance. Incidentally, I mentioned that he is only an associate professor; a less sophisticated editor would have said this--this avoids saying he has any academic rank at a med school at all, because it would have to say what it was. This is sophisticated WP-aware promotional writing, and therefore all the more dangerous.
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unproven--it could only be proven by professional awards, and he has none. If the claim is rather that all of the researchers there are doing research that will cure cancer, then it has to be based on the fact that they are all doing research as he is on subjects that bear some relation to things that could be argued might prove to cure or prevent cancer. The specific argument from that ed. above, and the argument in the article he writes, is that this particular individual is working on specific compounds that happen to be unlike the general class of such compounds--a class of compounds well-known to promote cancer. And that they have some ability in experiments still apparently unconfirmed elsewhere to interfere with biological processes in cell culture that have some relationship to human cancer or in mice (when used in conjunction with unrelated compounds known to inhibit cancer in mice) . That's the sort of argument one uses to raise money--all fundraisers and other publicists in the field say some variant of it. It may prove notable, and we all hope it will be. In WP terms, it means what so much of promotionalism here does mean,
651:, and it is an entirely promotional article that would need extensive rewriting beyond normal editing. Personally, I do not think the person is notable enough to be worth doing it. And there is another reason to avoid doing it: the author of this article appears to be an entirely promotional editor writing articles about physicians at the Moffit Cancer Center--and I see no reason to myself do properly the work they are (presumably) being paid for and doing improperly. There is a concentrated campaign at WP for articles on robotic surgery and its practitioners, and this is just one part of it. (I suspect it is an attempt to use us as part of a sales competition between the major manufactures of the multi-million dollar machines used in the field) 1194:
rate college. To say that everyone over that level is notable is way below our current standard. If we mean full professors at high intensity research institutions, then there's about 100,000 people, all of whom are probably notable, and representing the top 3% of all "professors". If we go by research expectations, the average h value for published authors is between 1 and 2. This is true in other fields also: who's an average football player? But if we limit ourself to full time professionals on top level teams, they're all notable. If the population of the world is 7 billion, then 3.5 billion people are above average. If we confine notability adults, as with rare exceptions we usually do here, that's 2 billion.
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which can be addressed through the normal editing process, and which I have tried to do in recent hours. I concede that I am weak in assessing the notability of academics, since I am a guy with a bachelor's degree not now involved in academia. But I don't think that the TNT essay applies here, since I honestly don't see the article as "hopelessly irreparable". I encourage everyone participating in this debate to make a thoughtful, constructive edit or three to this article, and add it to your watch lists. Thanks.
735:. What else is there? Chair of a department is clearly not a high enough level administrative position for WP:PROF, and the awards listed in the article are certainly too low-level to count for much. And I also agree with the promotional language and conflict-of-interest concerns raised by DGG. If he were more clearly notable, I'd suggest stubbing it down to something neutral and better-sourced, but in this case because of the borderline notability and COI issues I think 647:
quibbling--the meaning of the deletion reason is perfectly clear. I consider it reasonable for people to bring a questionable article here and ask for opinions; I do this routinely when it looks dubious but is out of my subject. There is two additional very good reasons for deletion, even deletion via speedy: The biographical part of the article is in large part a copy or very close paraphrase of his bio at Moffit Cancer Center
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article. The professional work section consists of an overextend discussion mixing in his totally unimportant work with his more important work showing no signs of discriminating between the two. The section on surgical work and his work on preventative guidelines talks about activities where he was a "major player" , or had "involvement" or was "one of the first..." . Etc. etc.
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and it caught my interest. I can work on any article I want to, and I get some strange pleasure occasionally from saving articles I discover at AfD. I would rather work on a biography of a research physician than an article on an internet meme or anime character. As for him being "only" an associate professor, I don't think that is incompatible with notability at all.
60:(2) related to possible COI promotion. However, there was not enough discussion on this second point to determine whether the borderline page is hopelessly promotional due to sophisticated efforts to advance outside interests over the aims of Knowledge. Some of the editors noted that the page is not hopelessly irreparable per the 1353:
It is quite unusual for a promotional editor to try to keep an article despite reasonable opposition. Sensible people, when they see something is not likely to be notable here, do not keep trying to make the same unlikely case. If you are indeed representing him or the school, you are conducting this
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have done, you will indeed find many thousands of articles. That is because the search terms do not distinguish between the two families of Vitamin E. On the other hand, if you do a search for "tocopherols and cancer" in PubMed, you get 962 results, the oldest being from 1951; then if you do a search
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In conventional language, "Vitamin E" is a reference to tocopherols--that is the substance used in the Western vitamin supplements labeled "Vitamin E" and found in most foods. It's been a known substance since the 1930s and has been extensively researched. Tocotrienols, on the other hand, are lesser
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I am the creator of this page. First, I'd like to thank the editors who have taken the time to contact me with constructive criticism and clarification on the policies and expectations for Knowledge writing. I want to improve and I appreciate your patience and welcoming demeanor. I'm sorry that many
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Second, about the promotionalism. The article freely uses adjectives of praise: "many papers"; ":most notable". the "Awards" section consists of directory listings, extremely minor awards, and student awards, and within-university awards. There's nothing here which should even be mentioned in a bio
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Certainly the individual means to treat cancer are significant & notable. But at this point he has not yet found one. Solving a major problem is notable: he has not yet done so,. Making a significant discovery is notable; he is so far only trying to make one. As I said earlier, should his work
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relatively sophisticated. For the usual really crude stuff, watch CSD. As for associate professors, although it's not a bar, very few of them have ever been found notable here, even from the most important research universities. Personally, I'd put the bar for WP:PROF lower, at a level which would
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have recommending deleting while conceding that notability may be possible. DGG described the citation count as "good" but "not spectacular". David Eppstein called the citations "nothing to sneeze at" and conceded "borderline notability". Both expressed concern about promotionalism and COI editing,
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I have copyedited a bit, correcting typos and errors. I have removed puffery and promotionalism, including two mentions of the brand name of the robotic surgery gear that he now uses. I have trimmed away some unreferenced material. I am not claiming that the article is without flaws, but I've tried
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If this is "sophisticated" PR writing, then that industry is not capable of fooling people like you. I can see trying to slip in the brand name of the robotic surgery system, but twice? And scrambling up where he was raised? The reason I chose to try to improve the article is that I am a volunteer
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First, with respect to notability. The relevant criterion in WP:PROF is the person being a recognized authority is their subject. For scientific fields, this is normally judged on the basis of citations of the individual's papers. The citations for his most cited papers in Google Scholar are 123,
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One thing mentioned above: the "average professor" test. Who is an average professor depends on the universe one choose to sample. If we take the approximately 3 million people in the world with some level of professorship title, the average professor is a junior associate professor at a second
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Doing a similar search in Google Scholar (for "T... and cancer prevention") yeilds 36,000+ (for tocopherols) compared to 9,000+ (for tocotrienols). You'll see that most of the tocotrienol articles are cited less than 100 times, with a handful having been cited over 300-1000 times, with the highly
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A major question everyone is considering is whether or not the subject has a high enough citation score to merit notability, according to the WP:PROF criteria #1. The main evidence that has been cited by at least two major contributors is that they searched for "Vitamin E and cancer research" and
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This is why I and others here have come to take a very strong exception to the sort of "notability" found in promotional articles. The fact that an article is considerably promotional now in practice merits the presumption that what is discussed is probably not notable either. That's not always
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In another direction, the presumed publicist for Mofitt is out to claim that all of its physicians ate notable, for all of them cure cancer. And presumably they all do, on a case to case basis. To what extent this individual is a better cancer surgeon than others, or more notable than others, is
756:: While there are many articles and institutions investigating the role of Vitamin E in cancer prevention, each group investigates specific aspects of this problem: rectal cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer, etc. A quick look at the articles which cite the subject's research will show that only 328:
and I get your point. But I believe that (except in the case of procedural noms on behalf of IP editors or newbies), a nomination should clearly state that the nominator has concluded the article should be deleted, and why. A nomination shouldn't implicitly ask other editors to do the groundwork
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as has been explained to you at some length, despite your refusal to listen, the reason why this has been nominated again is that it was closed imporoperly before - the reason for deletion is the same as the original policy-based reason for deletion. I do not see any reason why I have to repeat
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significant. And, to Knowledge users in the medical community looking up information about specific treatments and research projects, this is useful information. The subject's research has focused on solving a major problem (what do tocotrienols do?) and in doing so, has made a discovery (they
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A year ago I would have agreed with you. What I think we need to do here is add the most important academic people, with the priority for the notable ones, not the ones who havePR agents. If this were an isolated article, I would feel differently, but why should either you or I work at helping
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The reason given for deletion was specified as it being questionable whether the individual meets WP:PROF, a perfectly good reason for listing an article here. Asking the nominator to specify it in more exact words insteadtead of saying " Can we check whether this meets WP:PROF please" is mere
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on the editorial board of any major journal, just the minor journal published by his own research center: he "has provided ad hoc reviews" for major journals--something so utterly routine for any scientist with a PhD even with no faculty position whatsoever, that it doesn't even contribute to
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be satisfied if the person has pioneered or developed a significant new concept, technique or idea, made a significant discovery or solved a major problem in their academic discipline." The only argument that has been raised against this second claim/criteria is that, in the grand scheme of
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He is a medical researcher and MD. I'm not sure why this was cross-posted to the Academic & Educators list. I'm not sure within the field of medical research whether he is considered notable but I think different standards apply than are used to assess academic notability.
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an administrator, and I might very well have closed it too if I'd seen it before all of this happened. You certainly do have the right to reopen a new discussion as you've done here — but I do have to warn you that if you don't stop criticizing Dusti and start discussing the
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see my work as a harmful addition to the project-this is my first page. I understand that the creator of AFDs aren't always the best spokespersons for the articles, however, I would like to at least clarify a major misconception that seems to be impacting the discussion.
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known family of Vitamin E agents which we know very little about. The research on these four compounds (alpha- (α-), beta- (β-), gamma- (γ-), and delta- (δ-)) and their medical potential is relatively new. All this can be confirmed on Knowledge's own article for
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If you restrict the author's specialization to Vitamin E for melanoma, this will eliminate three of his five top-cited papers. And even in that highly-specialized subtopic, he does not have the most highly-cited paper (that one is by Prasad and Edwards-Prasad).
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105, 91, in good journals. The h value is 21. This is not spectacular in the field, but it's good. He is not one of the leading workers in the field: a GS search on the subject shows many papers on vitamin E and cancer with citation ranging from 200 to 3000.
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in almost the least effective possible way to enhance their reputations on WP. The way to do the least harm to your subject is to accept things now, so there won't be a bad experience on record when he does eventually do something notable.
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found citation counts of 1552, 960, 674, 651, 541, etc. I conclude from this that this is a high-citation area and that his own citation counts, 123, 105, etc (while nothing to sneeze at) are not enough to make a convincing case for
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essay. The Blow it up and start over essay seems more general and may not directly cover a hopelessly promotional situation. It may help to have a hopelessly promotional essay to address situations like this in the future. --
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I am not particularly happy at Barney letting me do all this checking, instead of trying himself, but he did find an article that needs to be removed. I shall be nominating other related articles for deletion.
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In this case Malafa appears to have strong Google scholar rankings, author or co-author of a few hundred papers, cited all over the place. It is evident that he has made a significant impact in his scholarly
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The previous AFD was incorrectly closed as "speedy keep" with no valid reason given for the "speedy keep" conclusion that was consistent with the original nomination. This has been explained to the closer.
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Nominator has twice failed to advance any policy-based reason for deletion. That's the reason why the previous nomination was closed as a speedy keep. Why do you want this article deleted?
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in the original nomination. This is a completely valid deletion rationale, and the fact that he worded it as a question rather than a clear statement should not be a reason for keeping. —
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He has been on the editorial board of some important journals is his subject, though that alone is not notability, as these are large editorial boards of several dozen people.
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He is an officer in no national professional association, he is an elected fellow of no professional society, his academic positions have been only as Associate Professor
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prevent pancreatic cancer growth, and how). The majority of literature on this topic will cite the subject's work (as other contributors have noted).
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1. The person's research has made significant impact in their scholarly discipline, broadly construed, as demonstrated by independent reliable sources
1299:. However, within "the academic discipline" (to cite the wording of the policy) of Oncology, the individual ways we can effectively treat cancer are 579:, and your nomination did not include a deletion rationale — and furthermore, the discussion had in fact been open for a full week already without 156: 122: 117: 776: 126: 977: 707:
That being said, I do think that the page could use some work. However there's a long stretch of road between "needs work" and "delete."
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has made significant impact in his scholarly discipline; his positions held are not remarkable; and the awards listed are trivial. --
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I've tagged the other large article created by this editor, and cut out some of the extraneous stuff, but i havent posted at
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lead to a treatment in practical use, or possibly even something that reaches stage III trials, notability will be present.
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with their decision, but they were entirely within their right to make it. Your first nomination consisted of a
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significant content, let alone to notability, and is always removed from articles along with the other fluff.
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This should be taken into account when considering the subject's impact on this area of research.
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does not require a person to be a "thought leader". The "average professor" test is often invoked.
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has so graciously done here. That's my view of the matter, and I'm not trying to be difficult.
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the correct process to use until you can provide clear, unambiguous evidence that the article
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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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but I've seen less-notable professors with articles avoid deletion citing that same policy.
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application of Vitamin E than the subject deals with, demonstrates, in accordance with
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Knowledge, the individual methods of treating cancer are insignificant, according to
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If it were already notable, usually one wouldn't have to come here to promote it.
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He has not been on the editorial board of a major journal. (corrected, Aug.26)
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for "Tocotrienols and Cancer" you get only 256 results, the oldest being from
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in a highly cited field. Promotional nature of article strengthens my view.
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whether it did or not. As noted, there are things you can do — take it to
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there are two different kinds of Vitamin E: tocopherols and tocotrienols.
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failed to meet our inclusion rules, but merely asked for other people to
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or not — you did not advance a reasoned, comprehensive argument that it
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I would also like to note that the articles created by this editor,
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate.
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If you do a Google Scholar search for "Vitamin E and cancer" as
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fails to meet one or more of our inclusion rules and should
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list of Academics and educators-related deletion discussions
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to attack its most glaring defects. Two editors I respect,
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I have twice provided the same valid reason for deletion.
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Nope, Dusti's action was acceptable — you don't have to
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Articles for deletion/Mokenge P. Malafa (2nd nomination)
1181: 139: 135: 131: 1321:-- Everything you say is called into question by your 203: 693:
Seems to meet the standards of WP:PROF specifically:
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has conducted research on whether α-TOS can prevent
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Malafa 88: 644:delete, possibly speedy delete as G11 7: 87: 62:Knowledge:Blow it up and start over 980:are OK but nothing to indicate he 972:, and of course not even close to 24: 1250:of 18 is a bit below the bar for 910:BTW I made an error above: he is 982:is a thought leader in his field 587:a keep or deletion rationale. I 1090:Looks like it doesnt quite fit 18:Knowledge:Articles for deletion 464:into question. As you can see 1: 1366:23:05, 1 September 2013 (UTC) 1343:20:53, 1 September 2013 (UTC) 1314:18:29, 1 September 2013 (UTC) 448:see my comment above reply to 75:13:24, 2 September 2013 (UTC) 1166:yet. I'll leave that to you. 547:, for example — if you have 1264:04:00, 29 August 2013 (UTC) 1233:02:53, 29 August 2013 (UTC) 1206:02:53, 29 August 2013 (UTC) 1189:18:54, 28 August 2013 (UTC) 1173:18:38, 28 August 2013 (UTC) 1153:18:31, 28 August 2013 (UTC) 1126:18:20, 28 August 2013 (UTC) 1115:conflict of interest policy 1081:17:09, 28 August 2013 (UTC) 1015:22:41, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 994:21:30, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 961:20:12, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 927:17:07, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 904:16:59, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 883:04:45, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 862:04:31, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 839:04:03, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 800:00:19, 27 August 2013 (UTC) 785:15:22, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 749:00:40, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 717:00:35, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 684:16:42, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 637:00:29, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 614:22:38, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 515:11:06, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 497:03:37, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 440:02:56, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 418:01:47, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 403:01:46, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 388:01:45, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 373:01:45, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 353:00:43, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 317:00:26, 26 August 2013 (UTC) 296:11:07, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 279:01:22, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 256:00:23, 25 August 2013 (UTC) 238:22:39, 24 August 2013 (UTC) 1406: 1042:which I have never edited. 1218:true, but it usually is. 575:be closed at any time by 1378:Please do not modify it. 507:Barney the barney barney 288:Barney the barney barney 230:Barney the barney barney 32:Please do not modify it. 1184:was just too much. -- 86:AfDs for this article: 1060:cited articles being 739:is a better choice. — 571:a deletion rationale 1323:conflict of interest 249:original nomination 1167: 1290:"Criterion 1 can 1161: 1067:Research articles 420: 405: 390: 375: 106:Mokenge P. Malafa 81:Mokenge P. Malafa 58:Knowledge content 1397: 1380: 1339: 1331: 1214:not yet notable. 1187: 1171: 1149: 1141: 1124: 958: 880: 878:Let's discuss it 872: 836: 834:Let's discuss it 828: 531:the article met 495: 490: 487: 484: 481: 478: 472:closed before. 415:Northamerica1000 400:Northamerica1000 385:Northamerica1000 370:Northamerica1000 350: 348:Let's discuss it 342: 276: 274:Let's discuss it 268: 247:as suggested in 222: 221: 207: 159: 147: 129: 52:- Does not meet 48:The result was 34: 1405: 1404: 1400: 1399: 1398: 1396: 1395: 1394: 1393: 1387:deletion review 1376: 1335: 1327: 1185: 1169: 1145: 1137: 1122: 1063:Review articles 951: 887:sophisticated 876: 870: 832: 826: 488: 485: 482: 479: 476: 473: 346: 340: 272: 266: 164: 155: 120: 104: 101: 84: 41:deletion review 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 1403: 1401: 1392: 1391: 1372: 1371: 1370: 1369: 1368: 1351: 1347: 1346: 1345: 1278:But, to quote 1268: 1267: 1240: 1239: 1238: 1237: 1236: 1235: 1208: 1191: 1156: 1155: 1129: 1128: 1107: 1106: 1105: 1096: 1095: 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1199: 1198: 1192: 1190: 1183: 1179: 1176: 1175: 1174: 1165: 1160: 1159: 1158: 1157: 1154: 1150: 1148: 1142: 1140: 1134: 1131: 1130: 1127: 1120: 1116: 1112: 1108: 1103: 1100: 1099: 1098: 1097: 1093: 1089: 1086: 1082: 1078: 1074: 1070: 1068: 1064: 1058: 1053: 1049: 1045: 1043: 1040: 1035: 1030: 1029: 1026: 1023: 1022: 1016: 1012: 1008: 1004: 1001: 1000: 999: 998: 995: 991: 987: 983: 979: 975: 971: 967: 964: 962: 959: 956: 955: 947: 944: 943: 928: 924: 920: 919: 913: 909: 908: 907: 906: 905: 901: 897: 896: 890: 886: 885: 884: 881: 879: 874: 873: 865: 864: 863: 859: 855: 854: 848: 847: 846: 845: 844: 843: 840: 837: 835: 830: 829: 821: 817: 812: 809: 801: 797: 793: 788: 787: 786: 782: 778: 774: 773: 771: 767: 763: 759: 755: 752: 751: 750: 746: 742: 738: 734: 729: 725: 722: 721: 718: 714: 710: 706: 705: 698: 695: 694: 692: 689: 688: 685: 681: 677: 676: 670: 666: 663: 660: 655: 654: 650: 645: 642: 638: 634: 630: 626: 622: 619: 615: 611: 607: 603: 599: 595: 590: 586: 582: 578: 574: 570: 566: 562: 558: 555:, but AFD is 554: 553:investigation 550: 546: 542: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 518: 517: 516: 512: 508: 503: 500: 499: 498: 494: 492: 491: 471: 467: 463: 459: 455: 452: 447: 444: 443: 441: 437: 433: 429: 428: 424: 423: 419: 416: 412: 407: 404: 401: 397: 392: 389: 386: 382: 377: 374: 371: 367: 362: 361: 354: 351: 349: 344: 343: 336: 332: 329:described in 327: 323: 320: 319: 318: 314: 310: 306: 302: 299: 297: 293: 289: 285: 282: 281: 280: 277: 275: 270: 269: 262: 259: 257: 254: 250: 246: 242: 241: 240: 239: 235: 231: 220: 216: 213: 210: 206: 202: 198: 195: 192: 189: 186: 183: 180: 177: 174: 170: 167: 166:Find sources: 162: 158: 154: 151: 145: 141: 137: 133: 128: 124: 119: 115: 111: 107: 103: 102: 97: 94: 92: 89: 82: 79: 77: 76: 72: 68: 63: 59: 55: 51: 44: 42: 38: 33: 27: 26: 19: 1377: 1374: 1355: 1336: 1328: 1318: 1300: 1291: 1287: 1283: 1275: 1243: 1222: 1219: 1213: 1212: 1195: 1146: 1138: 1132: 1101: 1087: 1066: 1062: 1061: 1056: 1041: 1033: 1024: 981: 965: 953: 952: 945: 916: 911: 893: 888: 877: 869: 851: 833: 825: 810: 765: 761: 757: 753: 723: 696: 690: 673: 661: 658: 643: 620: 593: 588: 584: 580: 576: 572: 568: 564: 560: 556: 552: 548: 540: 536: 528: 524: 520: 501: 475: 469: 457: 453: 445: 426: 425: 347: 339: 321: 300: 283: 273: 265: 260: 226: 214: 208: 200: 193: 187: 181: 175: 165: 152: 49: 47: 31: 28: 1306:Jcmeberhard 1244:Weak delete 1121:, ASAP. -- 1111:Jcmeberhard 1088:Weak delete 1073:Jcmeberhard 970:WP:ACADEMIC 724:Weak delete 541:investigate 537:objectively 454:Speedy keep 191:free images 1280:WP:Prof#C1 1256:Xxanthippe 1252:WP:Prof#C1 1180:at COI/N. 1007:Xxanthippe 733:WP:PROF#C1 700:discipline 565:definitely 561:definitely 462:competence 432:Xxanthippe 253:Tonywalton 1383:talk page 1182:this edit 1039:Vitamin E 766:different 709:Simonm223 549:questions 333:, and as 331:WP:BEFORE 37:talk page 1385:or in a 1276:Comment: 1164:WP:COI/N 1117:and our 1092:WP:NPROF 986:MelanieN 762:melanoma 598:WP:CIVIL 583:posting 525:question 505:myself. 470:properly 243:Move to 150:View log 67:Jreferee 39:or in a 1319:Comment 1248:h-index 1104:if kept 1102:Stubify 1003:WP:Prof 946:Comment 811:Comment 770:WP:PROF 754:Comment 625:WP:PROF 621:Comment 606:Bearcat 594:article 569:without 533:WP:PROF 529:whether 502:Comment 446:Comment 322:Comment 305:WP:PROF 301:Comment 284:Comment 197:WP refs 185:scholar 123:protect 118:history 54:WP:PROF 1329:Lesion 1301:highly 1178:posted 1139:Lesion 1133:Delete 1065:, not 974:WP:GNG 966:Delete 871:Cullen 827:Cullen 737:WP:TNT 602:WP:NPA 585:either 581:anyone 577:anyone 545:WP:N/N 527:as to 466:Barney 341:Cullen 267:Cullen 245:WP:N/N 169:Google 127:delete 50:Delete 1362:talk 1246:. GS 1229:talk 1202:talk 1057:1989. 923:talk 900:talk 858:talk 680:talk 521:agree 458:again 212:JSTOR 173:books 157:Stats 144:views 136:watch 132:links 16:< 1337:talk 1310:talk 1292:also 1260:talk 1147:talk 1077:talk 1050:and 1025:Keep 1011:talk 990:talk 818:and 796:talk 781:talk 745:talk 713:talk 691:Keep 649:here 633:talk 610:talk 600:and 511:talk 436:talk 427:Keep 313:talk 292:talk 261:Keep 234:talk 205:FENS 179:news 140:logs 114:talk 110:edit 71:talk 1357:DGG 1297:DGG 1224:DGG 1197:DGG 1186:# ▄ 1170:# ▄ 1168:-- 1123:# ▄ 1048:DGG 918:DGG 912:not 895:DGG 853:DGG 816:DGG 675:DGG 573:can 557:not 335:DGG 219:TWL 148:– ( 1364:) 1341:) 1325:. 1312:) 1262:) 1231:) 1204:) 1151:) 1079:) 1013:) 992:) 957:iz 925:) 902:) 889:= 860:) 798:) 783:) 758:he 747:) 715:) 682:) 635:) 612:) 604:. 589:am 513:) 456:- 442:. 438:) 413:. 398:. 383:. 368:. 315:) 294:) 251:. 236:) 199:) 142:| 138:| 134:| 130:| 125:| 121:| 116:| 112:| 73:) 1360:( 1333:( 1308:( 1266:. 1258:( 1227:( 1200:( 1143:( 1075:( 1069:. 1017:. 1009:( 988:( 954:L 921:( 898:( 856:( 794:( 790:— 779:( 743:( 711:( 678:( 631:( 608:( 509:( 489:i 486:t 483:s 480:u 477:D 434:( 311:( 290:( 232:( 223:) 215:· 209:· 201:· 194:· 188:· 182:· 176:· 171:( 163:( 160:) 153:· 146:) 108:( 69:(

Index

Knowledge:Articles for deletion
talk page
deletion review
WP:PROF
Knowledge content
Knowledge:Blow it up and start over
Jreferee
talk
13:24, 2 September 2013 (UTC)
Mokenge P. Malafa
Articles for deletion/Mokenge P. Malafa
Articles for deletion/Mokenge P. Malafa (2nd nomination)
Mokenge P. Malafa
edit
talk
history
protect
delete
links
watch
logs
views
View log
Stats
Google
books
news
scholar
free images
WP refs

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