Authors
Sara Owsley Sood, Elizabeth F Churchill, Judd Antin
Publication date
2012/2
Journal
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Volume
63
Issue
2
Pages
270-285
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
As online communities grow and the volume of user‐generated content increases, the need for community management also rises. Community management has three main purposes: to create a positive experience for existing participants, to promote appropriate, socionormative behaviors, and to encourage potential participants to make contributions. Research indicates that the quality of content a potential participant sees on a site is highly influential; off‐topic, negative comments with malicious intent are a particularly strong boundary to participation or set the tone for encouraging similar contributions. A problem for community managers, therefore, is the detection and elimination of such undesirable content. As a community grows, this undertaking becomes more daunting. Can an automated system aid community managers in this task? In this paper, we address this question through a machine learning …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SO Sood, EF Churchill, J Antin - Journal of the American Society for Information Science …, 2012