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The proliferation of platforms with distributed content production has led to scholarly interest in understanding why individuals contribute. Few studies have explored the impact of platforms' architectural designs on contributions. An important design component is divisibility, the extent to which contributions can be divided into separate tasks to be performed independently, and then recombined. In this paper, we theoretically explore the relationship between divisibility and contributions and test our predictions with data from the citizen science platform Zooniverse, exploiting a format change that decreased divisibility. Post-change, editors contributed fewer \emph{total} edits, and more \emph{extended} edits than predicted in the absence of a change. They also spent less time contributing post-change. Our findings are relevant for the design strategies of many citizen science projects, as well as other crowdsourcing platforms with simple, well-structured tasks |
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Barbosu, Sandra VerfasserIn aut, Storm crowds evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design Sandra Barbosu, Joshua Gans, [Toronto] [University of Toronto - Rotman School of Management] [2017], 1 Online-Ressource (circa 48 Seiten) Illustrationen, Text txt rdacontent, Computermedien c rdamedia, Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier, Rotman School of Management working paper no. 3039037, Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 unrestricted online access, The proliferation of platforms with distributed content production has led to scholarly interest in understanding why individuals contribute. Few studies have explored the impact of platforms' architectural designs on contributions. An important design component is divisibility, the extent to which contributions can be divided into separate tasks to be performed independently, and then recombined. In this paper, we theoretically explore the relationship between divisibility and contributions and test our predictions with data from the citizen science platform Zooniverse, exploiting a format change that decreased divisibility. Post-change, editors contributed fewer \emph{total} edits, and more \emph{extended} edits than predicted in the absence of a change. They also spent less time contributing post-change. Our findings are relevant for the design strategies of many citizen science projects, as well as other crowdsourcing platforms with simple, well-structured tasks, (DE-206)34 Graue Literatur DE-206, Gans, Joshua 1968- VerfasserIn (DE-588)130571776 (DE-627)503830526 (DE-576)298274825 aut, Joseph L. Rotman School of Management Rotman School of Management working paper no. 3039037 3039037 (DE-627)825613256 (DE-576)432974024 (DE-600)2821585-0 ns, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3039037 Resolving-System kostenfrei Volltext, https://ssrn.com/abstract=3039037 X:ELVSSRN Verlag kostenfrei, https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3039037 X:ELVSSRN Resolving-System kostenfrei, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3039037 LFER, LFER epn:348036425X 2019-05-29T00:00:00Z |
spellingShingle |
Barbosu, Sandra, Gans, Joshua, Storm crowds: evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design, Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, Rotman School of Management working paper, no. 3039037, The proliferation of platforms with distributed content production has led to scholarly interest in understanding why individuals contribute. Few studies have explored the impact of platforms' architectural designs on contributions. An important design component is divisibility, the extent to which contributions can be divided into separate tasks to be performed independently, and then recombined. In this paper, we theoretically explore the relationship between divisibility and contributions and test our predictions with data from the citizen science platform Zooniverse, exploiting a format change that decreased divisibility. Post-change, editors contributed fewer \emph{total} edits, and more \emph{extended} edits than predicted in the absence of a change. They also spent less time contributing post-change. Our findings are relevant for the design strategies of many citizen science projects, as well as other crowdsourcing platforms with simple, well-structured tasks, Graue Literatur |
title |
Storm crowds: evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design |
title_auth |
Storm crowds evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design |
title_full |
Storm crowds evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design Sandra Barbosu, Joshua Gans |
title_fullStr |
Storm crowds evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design Sandra Barbosu, Joshua Gans |
title_full_unstemmed |
Storm crowds evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design Sandra Barbosu, Joshua Gans |
title_in_hierarchy |
no. 3039037. Storm crowds: evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design ([2017]) |
title_short |
Storm crowds |
title_sort |
storm crowds evidence from zooniverse on crowd contribution design |
title_sub |
evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design |
title_unstemmed |
Storm crowds: evidence from Zooniverse on crowd contribution design |
topic |
Graue Literatur |
topic_facet |
Graue Literatur |
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https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3039037, https://ssrn.com/abstract=3039037, https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3039037 |
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AT barbosusandra stormcrowdsevidencefromzooniverseoncrowdcontributiondesign, AT gansjoshua stormcrowdsevidencefromzooniverseoncrowdcontributiondesign |