Social norms have traditionally been difficult to quantify. In any particular society, their sheer number and complex interdependencies often limit a system-level analysis. One exception is that of the network of norms that sustain the online Wikipedia community. We study the fifteen-year evolution of this network using the interconnected set of pages that establish, describe, and interpret the community’s norms. Despite Wikipedia’s reputation for ad hoc governance, we find that its normative evolution is highly conservative. The earliest users create norms that both dominate the network and persist over time. These core norms govern both content and interpersonal interactions using abstract principles such as neutrality, verifiability, and...
Abstract. Social life is regulated by rules. The order of norms regulating human behavior is conside...
Social norm theory seeks to explain such informal constraints on human behavior. While numerous area...
This paper presents the findings of a case study into the self-regulative mechanisms of the Wikiped...
Social norms have traditionally been difficult to quantify. In any particular society, their sheer n...
Tremendous progress in information and communication technologies in the last two decades has enable...
This paper documents the findings of research into the governance mechanisms within the distributed...
This paper documents the findings of research into the governance mechanisms within the distributed ...
Since Durkheim, sociologists have believed that actors in dense network structures experience fewer ...
This paper contributes to the debate about governance behaviour in on-line communities, particularly...
A norm is a behavior that emerges as a convention within society without any direction from a centra...
This paper contributes to the debate about governance behaviour in on-line communities, particularl...
Wikipedia's policies, guidelines, and other rules can be revised edited by anyone at any time, creat...
This paper develops a dialectic process model to explain how group norms evolve in self-organizing o...
International audienceWhile most scholars emphasize the role of prosocial motivations of contributor...
Conference paper presented at Forty-Second International Conference on Information Systems, Hyderaba...
Abstract. Social life is regulated by rules. The order of norms regulating human behavior is conside...
Social norm theory seeks to explain such informal constraints on human behavior. While numerous area...
This paper presents the findings of a case study into the self-regulative mechanisms of the Wikiped...
Social norms have traditionally been difficult to quantify. In any particular society, their sheer n...
Tremendous progress in information and communication technologies in the last two decades has enable...
This paper documents the findings of research into the governance mechanisms within the distributed...
This paper documents the findings of research into the governance mechanisms within the distributed ...
Since Durkheim, sociologists have believed that actors in dense network structures experience fewer ...
This paper contributes to the debate about governance behaviour in on-line communities, particularly...
A norm is a behavior that emerges as a convention within society without any direction from a centra...
This paper contributes to the debate about governance behaviour in on-line communities, particularl...
Wikipedia's policies, guidelines, and other rules can be revised edited by anyone at any time, creat...
This paper develops a dialectic process model to explain how group norms evolve in self-organizing o...
International audienceWhile most scholars emphasize the role of prosocial motivations of contributor...
Conference paper presented at Forty-Second International Conference on Information Systems, Hyderaba...
Abstract. Social life is regulated by rules. The order of norms regulating human behavior is conside...
Social norm theory seeks to explain such informal constraints on human behavior. While numerous area...
This paper presents the findings of a case study into the self-regulative mechanisms of the Wikiped...