Abstract

ABSTRACT Social interactions among online community members contributing to volunteered geographic information (VGI) are a key element and often crucial to VGI project success. Existing studies on VGI lack investigations into the patterns of social interactions within VGI communities and the drivers that may have shaped these patterns. This study bridges this gap by analyzing social interaction patterns in the iNaturalist citizen science project and exploring potential driving factors through social network analysis. The relationships between potential drivers of social interactions in iNaturalist (i.e. geographic distance, species taxon composition similarity, and land cover composition similarity) and the establishment, intensity, and clustering of interactions were examined. The results revealed that geographic proximity, common interests in species taxon categories, and shared preferences in observation environments are major drivers of inter-contributor species identification interactions in iNaturalist. These findings are supported by theories that explain the social forces behind social link formation. Geographic distance represents physical proximity, whereas species taxon composition similarity and land cover similarity reflect homophily effects. iNaturalist and many other VGI communities are spatially embedded social networks. The discovered interaction drivers in iNaturalist generally align with those in spatial social networks and are expected to be generalizable to VGI communities beyond iNaturalist.

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