Birdwatch Archive

Birdwatch Note Rating

2024-02-15 17:53:42 UTC - HELPFUL

Rated by Participant: 298C22F2728A36522C3F23FAB4ACB0F60F0BB25DBAFEB832605C2F613D30235C
Participant Details

Original Note:

Bison turn to face into winds because their fur is thickest around their head and neck, as well as naturally lying from front to back, thus better trapping heat as their fur is blown flat when facing into the wind. It is unlikely they know anything about weather patterns. https://www.canadianbison.ca/application/files/1015/2045/5761/Train_BISON_BEHAVIOURAUG9_2.pdf

All Note Details

Original Tweet

All Information

  • noteId - 1758126318531572108
  • participantId -
  • raterParticipantId - 298C22F2728A36522C3F23FAB4ACB0F60F0BB25DBAFEB832605C2F613D30235C
  • createdAtMillis - 1708019622175
  • version - 2
  • agree - 0
  • disagree - 0
  • helpful - 0
  • notHelpful - 0
  • helpfulnessLevel - HELPFUL
  • helpfulOther - 0
  • helpfulInformative - 0
  • helpfulClear - 1
  • helpfulEmpathetic - 0
  • helpfulGoodSources - 1
  • helpfulUniqueContext - 0
  • helpfulAddressesClaim - 1
  • helpfulImportantContext - 1
  • helpfulUnbiasedLanguage - 1
  • notHelpfulOther - 0
  • notHelpfulIncorrect - 0
  • notHelpfulSourcesMissingOrUnreliable - 0
  • notHelpfulOpinionSpeculationOrBias - 0
  • notHelpfulMissingKeyPoints - 0
  • notHelpfulOutdated - 0
  • notHelpfulHardToUnderstand - 0
  • notHelpfulArgumentativeOrBiased - 0
  • notHelpfulOffTopic - 0
  • notHelpfulSpamHarassmentOrAbuse - 0
  • notHelpfulIrrelevantSources - 0
  • notHelpfulOpinionSpeculation - 0
  • notHelpfulNoteNotNeeded - 0
  • ratingsId - 1758126318531572108298C22F2728A36522C3F23FAB4ACB0F60F0BB25DBAFEB832605C2F613D30235C