TY - JOUR
T1 - The evolutionary trajectories of peer-produced artifacts
T2 - Group composition, the trajectories' exploration, and the quality of artifacts
AU - Arazy, Ofer
AU - Lindberg, Aron
AU - Rezaei, Mostafa
AU - Samorani, Michele
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 University of Minnesota. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/10/25
Y1 - 2020/10/25
N2 - Members of an online community peer-produce digital artifacts by negotiating different perspectives and personal knowledge bases. These negotiations are manifested in the temporal evolution of the peer-produced artifact. In this study, we conceptualize the evolution of a digital artifact as a trajectory in a feature space. Our theoretical frame suggests that, through negotiations, contributors' actions “pull” the trajectory and shape its movement in the feature space. We hypothesize that the type of contributors that work on a focal article influences the extent to which that article's trajectory explores alternative positions within that space, and that the trajectory's exploration is, in turn, associated with the artifact's quality. To test these hypotheses, we analyzed the trajectories of wiki articles drawn from two peer-production communities, Wikipedia and Wikia, tracking the evolution of 242 paired articles for over a decade during which the articles went through 536,745 revisions. We found that the contributors who are the most likely to increase the trajectory's exploration are those that (1) return to work on the focal artifact and (2) are unregistered members in the broader online community. Further, our results show that the trajectory's exploration has a curvilinear association with article quality, indicating that exploration contributes positively to quality, but that the effect is reversed when exploration exceeds a certain level. The insights derived from this study highlight the value of an artifact-centric approach to increasing our understanding of the dynamics underlying peer-production.
AB - Members of an online community peer-produce digital artifacts by negotiating different perspectives and personal knowledge bases. These negotiations are manifested in the temporal evolution of the peer-produced artifact. In this study, we conceptualize the evolution of a digital artifact as a trajectory in a feature space. Our theoretical frame suggests that, through negotiations, contributors' actions “pull” the trajectory and shape its movement in the feature space. We hypothesize that the type of contributors that work on a focal article influences the extent to which that article's trajectory explores alternative positions within that space, and that the trajectory's exploration is, in turn, associated with the artifact's quality. To test these hypotheses, we analyzed the trajectories of wiki articles drawn from two peer-production communities, Wikipedia and Wikia, tracking the evolution of 242 paired articles for over a decade during which the articles went through 536,745 revisions. We found that the contributors who are the most likely to increase the trajectory's exploration are those that (1) return to work on the focal artifact and (2) are unregistered members in the broader online community. Further, our results show that the trajectory's exploration has a curvilinear association with article quality, indicating that exploration contributes positively to quality, but that the effect is reversed when exploration exceeds a certain level. The insights derived from this study highlight the value of an artifact-centric approach to increasing our understanding of the dynamics underlying peer-production.
KW - Artifact quality
KW - Artifact trajectory
KW - Exploration
KW - Feature space
KW - Group composition
KW - Peer-production
KW - Wikis
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85100354712&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.25300/MISQ/2020/15379
DO - 10.25300/MISQ/2020/15379
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85100354712
SN - 0276-7783
VL - 44
SP - 2013
EP - 2054
JO - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
JF - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
IS - 4
ER -