Usage, placement, and parameters

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((Human-centric|date=August 2024))

According to MOS:LAYOUT, maintenance templates such as this one ought be placed after hatnotes, at the start of the article page. That placement is supported by consensus obtained in an RfC at Template talk:Refimprove § RfC: Location of Tag.

A |talk= parameter is allowed; setting this to any value (for example, ((Human-centric|talk=xyz)) will result in the message "See talk page for details" being included in the tag, with a blue link on the words "talk page" that will link directly to the associated talk page. If the value is a valid anchor on the talk page (e.g., the title of a section or subsection heading, or, ideally, an actual "anchor"), then the talk page link will go directly to that section/ anchor; if not, it will simply to go the top of the talk page. This parameter should be used if the user placing it also intends to create or knows of a section of the talk page in which this issue is discussed. The user should be certain that the talk page includes an example of at least one specific animal that shares the attribute with humans.

The template also takes |sect= parameter allowing the template to be used on a section of an article rather than the entire article. When this is done, the template might appear like this: ((Human-centric|section)) which will result in

This section about biology may be excessively human-centric. Please improve coverage for other species and discuss this issue on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove this message)

When to use

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This template should be placed at the beginning of articles that are written as though its subject matter only or almost only applies to humans when in fact many other animals also have attributes/features/behavior relevant to the subject matter of the articles.

When to remove/replace

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This template should be removed once the article or section no longer reads as though its content only applies to humans, and mentions at least one other animal. It may be removed by the user who placed it, the article creator, or anyone else who decides this requirement has been met. It should also be removed, of course, if the subject of the article/section does in fact only relate to humans or the template was applied erroneously in contravention of cases where the template should not be used.

The template should be replaced with some form of hatnote if an article eventually becomes written or is discovered which discusses the term in a non-human biological context. The hatnote should point either to a general disambiguation page (if it exists) or to the article directly.

When not to use

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Also note

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See also

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