 Welcome to article feedback on Wikipedia. This video screencast will give you a quick tour of this new feature from the Wikimedia Foundation. It lets readers give suggestions and helps editors make improvements to articles and provides a whole new way to contribute productively on Wikipedia. Here's how it works. As a reader on Wikipedia, you can easily make suggestions to improve articles like this one. Simply scroll down to the bottom of the page and answer the question, did you find what you were looking for? So here we thought something was missing, so we're going to select no. I'm going to type a short comment and then we'll post the feedback. After you post your feedback, you'll be invited to contribute in other ways. For example, you may be encouraged to edit this article. And to see where your comment has been posted, click on this link next to the thank you note. You can see your latest post here on the feedback page, which also shows what others thought of this article. Please take a moment to promote the most helpful feedback. Scroll down the page and here's an interesting comment. This one seems useful, so I'll click the thumbs up icon, which will bring it to the attention of the editors. If you see inappropriate comments, simply flag them as abuse. So this is an easy way for anyone to add a comment on Wikipedia, even if they don't have time to learn how it works. And research shows that many readers become editors after posting feedback. Article feedback can also help editors improve articles on Wikipedia based on user suggestions. Here's how it works for editors. On any article, check the talk page to see if anyone's added feedback. If they have, this link will appear and it will take you to the feedback page. As an editor, you have access to special tools for using this feedback shown here on the right. If you see a comment that you think is particularly useful, you could feature it. Such as this one that was posted earlier. Add a note and feature this post. This will put it higher up on the feedback page, so it will be noticed by other editors. And once an article is being edited based on a previous suggestion, you can mark it as resolved to move it further down the list. You can also view the activity on any feedback to see what others thought about this particular comment. Some experienced editors and administrators called monitors can also hide comments that are inappropriate. For example, this one seems inappropriate. I'm going to hide it. And the comment is gone. Monitors can also request oversight if they believe that a comment should be permanently removed. If you would like to see all comments from all across Wikipedia, scroll to the bottom of any page and click here to go to the central feedback page where editors can quickly separate good and bad feedback all in one place. So that's article feedback in a nutshell. For more information, click the Learn More link on any feedback page. Our research suggests that it's an effective way for Wikipedia readers to contribute to the encyclopedia and it also helps editors improve articles based on that feedback. Most importantly, it engages readers to become editors over time. We hope you'll find this new feature useful. Enjoy.