Abstract

Online communities are used across several fields of human activities, as environments for large-scale collaboration. Most successful ones employ professionals, sometimes called “community managers” or “moderators”, for tasks including onboarding new participants, mediating conflict, and policing unwanted behaviour. Network scientists routinely model interaction across participants in online communities as social networks. We interpret the activity of community managers as (social) network design: they take action oriented at shaping the network of interactions in a way conducive to their community’s goals. It follows that, if such action is successful, we should be able to detect its signature in the network itself.Growing networks where links are allocated by a preferential attachment mechanism are known to converge to networks displaying a power law degree distribution. Growth and preferential attachment are both reasonable first-approximation assumptions to describe interaction networks in online communities. Our main hypothesis is that managed online communities are characterised by in-degree distributions that deviate from the power law form; such deviation constitutes the signature of successful community management. Our secondary hypothesis is that said deviation happens in a predictable way, once community management practices are accounted for. If true, these hypotheses would give us a simple test for the effectiveness of community management practices.We investigate the issue using (1) empirical data on three small online communities and (2) a computer model that simulates a widely used community management activity called onboarding. We find that onboarding produces in-degree distributions that systematically deviate from power law behaviour for low-values of the in-degree; we then explore the implications and possible applications of the finding.

Highlights

  • Organizations running online communities typically employ community managers, tasked with encouraging participation and resolving conflict (Rheingold 1993)

  • As we consider the interval k ≥ 1, we find that the indegree distribution of the Innovatori PA network – the unmoderated one – is consistent with the expected behavior of an evolving network with preferential attachment

  • On the other hand, when we consider only the tail of the degree distributions, i.e. k ≥ kmin, all three communities display a behavior that is consistent of a setting with preferential attachment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Organizations running online communities typically employ community managers, tasked with encouraging participation and resolving conflict (Rheingold 1993). These are participants, typically in small numbers (one or two members in the smaller communities) who recognise some central command, and carry out its directives. Putting in place policies for online communities is costly, in terms of community managers recruitment and training, and software tools. Cottica et al Applied Network Science (2017) 2:30 benefits organisations running online communities expect from policies; and why they choose certain policies, and not others. In what follows we outline and briefly discuss the set of assumptions that underpin our investigation

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call