\chapter{Related Work} % py umschreiben auf how the new contributor thing works https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/314472/what-are-the-exact-criteria-for-the-new-contributor-indicator-to-be-shown ; change date = 2018-08-21T21:04:49.177 %read template notes again and adjust %askubuntu analyse, stackexchange.com/sites anschauen was noch analyse \section{Background} % explain SO and SE in detail and how it works (https://stackexchange.com/tour) %- question answer platform with 174 sites for different topics, eg programming (biggest one), latex, ... %- questions and answers in natural language %- questions can have tags %- questioners should post their question in the appropiate community, and formulation the question precisely, question should meet standards defined by the community %- asker can accept 1 answer %- question, answers up/downvoting, include voting and reputation changes from tour site, reputation == trustworthyness %- badges and privilesges with higher reputation %- suggestion can be made by others to improve the question, eg add tags or add/change content in the question for better finding, answering question %- comments for questions and answers %- each community has a meta page for discussion about community itself (not questions within the community) %- each community uses the same software, although layout may differ from community to community but generally speaking same structure of the page %- add pictures of typical stackexchange question page %community driven knowlege creation process %higher reputation also gives moderation tools (site management, flagging question offtopic, unspecific, ...) TODO add reference % % not only ``forum`` for fast q&a but also knowledge base % public posts and therefore good search engine availibity eg. google % so success: Design Lessons from the Fastest Q&A Site in the West \cite{mamykina2011design} understanding SO success % change introduced mid august 2018 % write about that post % include user question on how exactly it works \section{State of the Art} %structure %- various research on collaborative online communities, yahoo answers, stackoverflow/exchange, quora, wikipedia, ... % - A comprehensive survey and classification of approaches for community question answering \cite{srba2016comprehensive} # good description of SO % - Design Lessons from the Fastest Q&A Site in the West \cite{mamykina2011design} understanding SO success %- maintaining a community: % - onboarding of newcomers % - keeping users on the platform %- onboarding problem e.g. wikipedia, stackexchange % - getting users to stay and contribute to the site % - One-day flies on StackOverflow \cite{slag2015one} % - Eliciting New Wikipedia Users’ Interests via Automatically Mined Questionnaires: For a Warm Welcome, Not a Cold Start \cite{yazdanian2019eliciting} % -> cold start recommender system problem for recommending newcommers arictles to read and get a feeling for how to write articles; similar to SO because new commers % - incentives for new users via reputation % - gaming the system: Building reputation in stackoverflow: an empirical investigation. \cite{bosu2013building} gaming the reputation system of SO % - prevent 1 day flies & keep new users engaged: Analysis of the reputation system and user contributions on a question answering website: Stackoverflow \cite{movshovitz2013analysis} about the reputation system % - badges % - One Size Does Not Fit All: Badge Behavior in Q\&A Sites \cite{yanovsky2019one} # all about badges, steering users, motivation % -> Can gamification motivate voluntary contributions? The case of StackOverflow Q&A community \cite{cavusoglu2015can} stimulting users to contribute via badges % -> SOCIAL STATUS AND BADGE DESIGN \cite{immorlica2015social} about badges and how they create status classes, badges for every user and individual badges % % -> Quantifying the impact of badges on user engagement in online Q&A communities \cite{li2012quantifying} maintain consistent engagement, gamification via badges % - On the Causal Effect of Badges \cite{kusmierczyk2018causal} # all abount badges, steering users, motivation % - Steering user behavior with badges \cite{anderson2013steering} # all abount badges, steering users, motivation % - newcomers socialization, experienced users as models/mentors, positive feedback to newcomers % - Do organizational socialization tactics influence newcomer embeddedness and turnover? \cite{allen2006organizational} #newcommers to organizations % - We Don't Do That Here: How Collaborative Editing with Mentors Improves Engagement in Social Q\&A Communities \cite{ford2018we} # mentoring newcomers questions (before posting), 1 month experiment % - Stack Overflow Isn't Very Welcoming: It's Time for That to Change \cite{hanlon2019stack} # passt sehr gut in die story, effort to make site more welcoming % - Welcome Wagon: Classifying Comments on Stack Overflow \cite{silge2019welcome} #all about comment, effort to make site more welcoming % %- quality: % - Predictors of Answer Quality in Online Q&A Sites cite{harper2008predictors} shows that open qa sites are better than paywall or expert sites % - Predicting the perceived quality of online mathematics contributions from users' reputations \cite{tausczik2011predicting} about mathoverflow and quality % %- quasi experiments % - stackexchange change % - You Can’t Stay Here: The Efficacy of Reddit’s 2015 Ban Examined Through Hate Speech \cite{chandrasekharan2017you} % -> reddit hate community ban: change = ban %reminder % write in aspect of new users % -> getting users on board (community guide lines) % -> incentives for new users via reputation (maybe batches (do research on that)) % -> gaming the system % -> prevent 1 day flies % -> keep new users engaged % 2 problems: onboarding and keeping users active (eg badges) %paper links bekommen: %tutorial: Bernal et al. \cite{bernal2017interrupted} %You Can’t Stay Here: The Efficacy of Reddit’s 2015 Ban Examined Through Hate Speech \cite{chandrasekharan2017you} % -> reddit hate community ban: change = ban % -> todo %literature % Tracing Community Genealogy: How New Communities Emerge from the Old \cite{tan2018tracing} % On the personality traits of stackoverflow users \cite{bazelli2013personality} analyzing personality traits, top reputated users are more extroverted than less reputated users % -> gute vorlage http://softwareprocess.es/pubs/bazelli2013ICSMERA-Personality.pdf % <- One-day flies on StackOverflow \cite{slag2015one}, 1 contribution during whole registration, only user with 6 month of registration % -> [1] Discovering Value from Community Activity on Focused Question Answering Sites: A Case Study of Stack Overflow \cite{anderson2012discovering} accepted answer strongly depends on when answers arrive, considered not only the question and accepted answer but the set of answers to a question % -> [23] Predicting the perceived quality of online mathematics contributions from users' reputations \cite{tausczik2011predicting} about mathoverflow and quality % -> [4] Predictors of Answer Quality in Online Q&A Sites cite{harper2008predictors} 1) shows that fee or expert sites are better than open qa sites (greater fee better answers), 2) big communty sites like Yahoo! Answers out perform sites which depend on experts (e.g. library refernce services) (higher answer diversity and responsiveness) % -> todo done % -> todo done % -> contains generic refernces to boost ref count % -> [5] Building reputation in stackoverflow: an empirical investigation. \cite{bosu2013building} gaming the reputation system of SO, answering question with tags with lower expertise density, answering promptly, first one to answer, activity during off peak hours, contributing to diverse areas % -> [8] Analysis of the reputation system and user contributions on a question answering website: Stackoverflow \cite{movshovitz2013analysis} about the reputation system, high reputation indicates primary source of answers and high quality, most questions asked by low reputation users but high reputation users post most questions on avg compared to low reputation users, effective finding of spam users and other extreme behaviors via graph analysis, predicting which users become influential longterm contributors, experts can be reliably identified based on the participation in the first few months after registration % -> todo done % -> [1] Design Lessons from the Fastest Q&A Site in the West \cite{mamykina2011design} understanding SO success, 1) productive competition (gamification reputation), 2) founders were already experts on site the created (ensured success early on, founders involved in community not external), 3) meta page for discussion and voting on features (same mechanics as on SO page) % -> [2] How Do Programmers Ask and Answer Questions on the Web? \cite{treude2011programmers} qa sites very effective at code review and conceptual questions % -> [10] The role of knowledge in software development \cite{robillard1999role} people have different areas of knowledge and expertise % -> [3] Finding the Right Facts in the Crowd: Factoid Question Answering over Social Media \cite{bian2008finding}, about Yahoo! Answers, finding factual answers by using available data on user interaction % No Country for Old Members: User Lifecycle and Linguistic Change in Online Communities \cite{danescu2013no} % Better When It Was Smaller? Community Content and Behavior After Massive Growth \cite{lin2017better}, defaulting of subreddit, quality remains high, dip in upvotes directly after defaulting but recover quickly and get even higher than before, complaints about low-quality content do not increase, language stays the same, however community clusters among fewer posts than before defaulting % -> breaching community norms (kraut 2012) % starting a community: critical mass, enought users to attract other users who also create content % attracting new users: attract new users to replace leaving ones, new users should be skilled and motivated to contribute (chanllange, depends on community some accept everyone others need specific skills (Eg OSS) or qualitities (eg illness for medical suppport groupgs, etc), mew users less commitment thatn old ones, newcommers may not behave according to community standard as they dont now them % encoraging commitment: willingness to stay in community (increases statisfaction, les likely to leave, better performance, more contribution), harder than in companies with employee contracts, contrast to OSS (no contract, voluntarity), greter competition from other communities in contrast to rl where options are limimted by location and distance % encouraging contribution: online communities need contributions by users (not lurking), content is foundation of community, contributions by users follows power law (usally, also confirmed in my results) % regualting behavior: maintain a funtioning community, prevent troll, inappropiate behavior, limit damage if it occurs, ease of entry & exit -> high turnover % -> lowering content quality (Gorbatai 2011) % Eliciting New Wikipedia Users’ Interests via Automatically Mined Questionnaires: For a Warm Welcome, Not a Cold Start \cite{yazdanian2019eliciting} % -> cold start recommender system problem for recommending newcommers articles to read and get a feeling for how to write articles; similar to SO because new commers don't know the rules so well; familiarize newcommers with how things work on the site, onboarding % Do organizational socialization tactics influence newcomer embeddedness and turnover? \cite{allen2006organizational} #newcommers to organizations, actively embedding newcomers into organization, shows connection between socialaization and turnover (leaving the organization) % -> todo % We Don't Do That Here: How Collaborative Editing with Mentors Improves Engagement in Social Q\&A Communities \cite{ford2018we} # mentoring new commers questions (before posting), 1 month experiment, collaborative experiment with stackoverflow team, novices got a choice upon submitting a question whether or not the want feedback from a mentor regaurding the question, if so redirect to help room where mentor reviews question and suggests changes to question, mentored questions significatly better than non-mentored ones, higher scores fewer offtopic or poor questions, novices more comfortable with mentor reviewed questions % -> todo % -> Non-public and public online community participation: Needs, attitudes and behavior \cite{nonnecke2006non} about lurking, many programmers do that probably, not even registering, lurking not a bad behavior but observing, lurkers are more introverted, passive behavior, less optimistic and positive than posters, prviously lurking was thought of free riding, not contributing, taking not giving to comunity, important for getting to know a community, better integration when joining % -> Social Barriers Faced by Newcomers Placing Their First Contribution in Open Source Software Projects\cite{steinmacher2015social} onboarding in open source software projects, difficulties for newcomers, newcommers often on their own, barriers when 1st contributing to a project, % -> Paradise Unplugged: Identifying Barriers for Female Participation on Stack Overflow \cite{ford2016paradise} gender gap, females only 5%, contribution barriers, found 5 gender specific (women) barriers among 14 barrier in total, barriers also affect groups like industry programmers % -> Community-based production of open-source software: What do we know about the developers who participate? \cite{david2008community} only 5% women contribute to OSS % -> https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2019: 7.9% women, increase since 2015: 5.8% % -> Gender, Representation and Online Participation: A Quantitative Study \cite{vasilescu2014gender} investigation on minorities (eg women), under representation of minorities % -> Why So Few? Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. \cite{hill2010so} women only 20 percent of bachelor degrees % -> Women and science careers: leaky pipeline or gender filter? \cite{clark2005women} underrepresentation in STEM % Stack Overflow Isn't Very Welcoming: It's Time for That to Change \cite{hanlon2019stack} # passt sehr gut in die story, effort to make site more welcoming % -> todo % -> marginalized group feel SO is a hostile and elitist place, new coders, women, people of color, etc % -> admitting of problem that have not been addressed (enough), mixed messages (expert site or for everyone), to little guidance for new users, pecking on new users who dont know all little things on what (not) to do (no plz and thx, low quality question -> low qualtity answer -> comments about support for low quality) or bad english, previous attempts to improve welcoming, Summer of Love (https://stackoverflow.blog/2012/07/20/kicking-off-the-summer-of-love/), The War of the Closes (https://stackoverflow.blog/2013/06/25/the-war-of-the-closes/), The NEW new “Be Nice” Policy (“Code of Conduct”) — Updated with your feedback (https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/240839/the-new-new-be-nice-policy-code-of-conduct-updated-with-your-feedback), Mentorship Research Project - Results + Wrap-Up (https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/357198/mentorship-research-project-results-wrap-up?noredirect=1&lq=1) TODO also refer paper about that here, removal condesting and sarcastic comments, ideas about beginner ask page (TODO already implemted?), dont judge users for not knowing things (e.g. posting duplicates) % Rolling out the Welcome Wagon: June Update \cite{friend2018rolling} “Ask a Question Wizard” prototype, reduce exclusion (negative feelings, expectations and experiences), improve inclusion (learn from other communities facing similar problems), classification of abusive and unwelcoming comments % Welcome Wagon: Classifying Comments on Stack Overflow \cite{silge2019welcome} #all about comments, effort to make site more welcoming, staff internal rating of comments (fine, unwelcoming, abusive, 57 raters, 13742 ratings, 3992 comments) % -> todo % One Size Does Not Fit All: Badge Behavior in Q\&A Sites \cite{yanovsky2019one} # all abount badges, steering users, motivation % -> todo % -> Can gamification motivate voluntary contributions? The case of StackOverflow Q&A community \cite{cavusoglu2015can} stimulting users to contribute via badges % -> SOCIAL STATUS AND BADGE DESIGN \cite{immorlica2015social} about badges and how they create status classes, badges for every user and individual badges % -> Quantifying the impact of badges on user engagement in online Q&A communities \cite{li2012quantifying} maintain consistent engagement, gamification via badges % On the Causal Effect of Badges \cite{kusmierczyk2018causal} # all abount badges, steering users, motivation, first-time badges, first time badges steer user behavior if benefit greater then effort, otherwise no effect % -> todo % Steering user behavior with badges \cite{anderson2013steering} # all abount badges, steering users, motivation, user may put in non trivial amounts of work to achieve badges -> powerful incentives, badges used in multiple ways (steer users to ask/answer more questions, voting, etc.) % -> todo % A comprehensive survey and classification of approaches for community question answering \cite{srba2016comprehensive} # good description of SO % -> todo % -> meta study on papers published between 2005 and 2014 %literatur analyse todo %paper lesen und sachen rausschreiben; keywords ... %struktur neu machen %schreiben