Sauermann Henry, Franzoni Chiara
Georgia Institute of Technology, Scheller College of Business, Atlanta, GA 30308; and
Politecnico di Milano, School of Management, Milan 20133, Italy.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Jan 20;112(3):679-84. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1408907112. Epub 2015 Jan 5.
Scientific research performed with the involvement of the broader public (the crowd) attracts increasing attention from scientists and policy makers. A key premise is that project organizers may be able to draw on underused human resources to advance research at relatively low cost. Despite a growing number of examples, systematic research on the effort contributions volunteers are willing to make to crowd science projects is lacking. Analyzing data on seven different projects, we quantify the financial value volunteers can bring by comparing their unpaid contributions with counterfactual costs in traditional or online labor markets. The volume of total contributions is substantial, although some projects are much more successful in attracting effort than others. Moreover, contributions received by projects are very uneven across time--a tendency toward declining activity is interrupted by spikes typically resulting from outreach efforts or media attention. Analyzing user-level data, we find that most contributors participate only once and with little effort, leaving a relatively small share of users who return responsible for most of the work. Although top contributor status is earned primarily through higher levels of effort, top contributors also tend to work faster. This speed advantage develops over multiple sessions, suggesting that it reflects learning rather than inherent differences in skills. Our findings inform recent discussions about potential benefits from crowd science, suggest that involving the crowd may be more effective for some kinds of projects than others, provide guidance for project managers, and raise important questions for future research.
在更广泛公众(大众群体)参与下开展的科学研究,正吸引着科学家和政策制定者越来越多的关注。一个关键前提是,项目组织者或许能够利用未被充分利用的人力资源,以相对较低的成本推进研究。尽管此类例子越来越多,但对于志愿者愿意为众包科学项目付出的努力贡献,仍缺乏系统性研究。通过分析七个不同项目的数据,我们通过将志愿者的无偿贡献与传统或在线劳动力市场中的假设成本进行比较,来量化志愿者能够带来的经济价值。尽管有些项目在吸引参与者付出努力方面比其他项目成功得多,但总体贡献量依然可观。此外,各项目收到的贡献在时间上分布极不均衡——活动量下降的趋势会因通常由推广努力或媒体关注引发的高峰而中断。通过分析用户层面的数据,我们发现大多数贡献者仅参与一次且投入甚少,而大部分工作是由相对较少的回头用户完成的。虽然顶级贡献者身份主要是通过更高的投入程度获得的,但顶级贡献者往往工作速度也更快。这种速度优势在多次参与过程中逐渐显现,表明这反映的是学习而非技能上的固有差异。我们的研究结果为近期关于众包科学潜在益处的讨论提供了参考,表明让大众参与对某些类型的项目可能比其他项目更有效,为项目经理提供了指导,并为未来研究提出了重要问题。