An in depth analysis of the rapidly growing phenomenon of crowdsourcing reflects on the dramatic economic, cultural, business, and political implications of applying the open source idea to a variety of fields outside of software development and addresses the unique opportunities and problems of this expanding trend.xxiv+311p.;13x20c
With the progress of Web 2.0 technologies and corresponding organizational capabilities, new informa...
As academic and practitioner studies on crowdsourcing have been building up since 2006, the subject ...
This study conducts a comprehensive literature review to investigate the impactful utilization of cr...
Traditionally, the term 'crowd' was used almost exclusively in the context of people who self-organi...
As traditional innovation has already taken its place in managers' to do lists; managers and compani...
Crowdsourcing - a neologism created from the words 'crowd' and 'outsourcing' - describes giving task...
The term crowdsourcing was introduced by Jeff Howe (2006). It is the act of a company or organisatio...
‘Crowdsourcing’ describes the diverse practices of online distributed knowledge production whereby t...
Crowdsourcing is a concept that first appeared in an article written by Jeff Howe in 2006 in the Wir...
Open innovation has gained increased attention as a potential paradigm for improving innovation perf...
International audienceThe word Crowdsourcing -a compound contraction of Crowd and Outsourcing, was u...
International audienceConsciously or unconsciously, an army of Internet users participates every day...
International audienceCrowdsourcing is a relatively recent phenomenon that only appeared in 2006, bu...
Crowdsourcing, as a digital process employed to obtain information, ideas, and solicit contributions...
Crowdsourcing is a new, online-based, way of outsourcing that relies on large and undefined networks...
With the progress of Web 2.0 technologies and corresponding organizational capabilities, new informa...
As academic and practitioner studies on crowdsourcing have been building up since 2006, the subject ...
This study conducts a comprehensive literature review to investigate the impactful utilization of cr...
Traditionally, the term 'crowd' was used almost exclusively in the context of people who self-organi...
As traditional innovation has already taken its place in managers' to do lists; managers and compani...
Crowdsourcing - a neologism created from the words 'crowd' and 'outsourcing' - describes giving task...
The term crowdsourcing was introduced by Jeff Howe (2006). It is the act of a company or organisatio...
‘Crowdsourcing’ describes the diverse practices of online distributed knowledge production whereby t...
Crowdsourcing is a concept that first appeared in an article written by Jeff Howe in 2006 in the Wir...
Open innovation has gained increased attention as a potential paradigm for improving innovation perf...
International audienceThe word Crowdsourcing -a compound contraction of Crowd and Outsourcing, was u...
International audienceConsciously or unconsciously, an army of Internet users participates every day...
International audienceCrowdsourcing is a relatively recent phenomenon that only appeared in 2006, bu...
Crowdsourcing, as a digital process employed to obtain information, ideas, and solicit contributions...
Crowdsourcing is a new, online-based, way of outsourcing that relies on large and undefined networks...
With the progress of Web 2.0 technologies and corresponding organizational capabilities, new informa...
As academic and practitioner studies on crowdsourcing have been building up since 2006, the subject ...
This study conducts a comprehensive literature review to investigate the impactful utilization of cr...