Discussions about incentives to participate are increasingly common, but they are as shallow as most conversations nowadays about the subject of “feedback loops”. And very little reflection is actually dedicated to questions such as why, when and how people participate.
This is why this talk by Judd Antin, User Experience Researcher at Facebook, is one of the best I’ve heard lately. He goes a step further than making commonsensical assumptions, and examines the issue of motivations to participate in a more critical and systematic manner. When it comes to technology mediated processes, Judd is actually one of the few people looking seriously at the issue of incentives/motivations to participate.
In the talk Judd begins by arguing that “(…) the foundations of motivation in the age of social media, they are kind of the same as the foundations of motivation before the age of social media.” I cannot help but agree and sympathize with the statement. It is particularly annoying to hear on a daily basis claims suggesting that individual and social processes are fundamentally altered by technologies, and “how new” this field is. “I don’t fool myself into thinking that this is a brand new world”, remarks Judd. Too bad so many are fooling themselves these days.
Judd’s take on incentives to participate is particularly sobering for some cheerleaders of gamification, highlighting the limits of instrumental rewards and the need to focus on issues such as group identification, efficacy and – importantly – simplicity.
Finally, and on a more anecdotal note, it is interesting to see how some issues are similar across different spaces. At some point Judd points out that the “dislike” button is one of the features most requested by Facebook users. In a similar vein, one of the most requested features for e-Petitions platforms is the possibility to sign “against” a petition.
In both cases, these requests have been largely ignored. My feeling is that the implications for these choices of design for collective action are far from neutral, and these are issues that we should be looking at more closely.
In any case, Judd’s talk is great, and so are his articles: you can find a list of his most recent ones below.
Title / Author | Year |
SYSTEM FOR CUSTOM USER-GENERATED ACHIEVEMENT BADGES BASED ON ACTIVITY FEEDS J Antin, EF Churchill, DA Shamma, M De Sa US Patent 20,130,086,484 |
2013 |
Social desirability bias and self-reports of motivation: a study of amazon mechanical turk in the US and India J Antin, A Shaw Proceedings of the 2012 ACM annual conference on Human Factors in Computing … |
2012 |
Profanity use in online communities S Sood, J Antin, E Churchill Proceedings of the 2012 ACM annual conference on Human Factors in Computing … |
2012 |
Using Crowdsourcing to Improve Profanity Detection SO Sood, J Antin, E Churchill AAAI Spring Symposium Series, 69-74 |
2012 |
Local experts and online review sites J Antin, M de Sa, EF Churchill Proceedings of the acm 2012 conference on computer supported cooperative … |
2012 |
Some of all human knowledge: gender and participation in peer production A Forte, J Antin, S Bardzell, L Honeywell, J Riedl, S Stierch Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative … |
2012 |
Apples to Oranges?: Comparing across studies of open collaboration/peer production J Antin, EH Chi, J Howison, S Paul, A Shaw, J Yew Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Wikis and Open … |
2011 |
Gender differences in Wikipedia editing J Antin, R Yee, C Cheshire, O Nov Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Wikis and Open … |
2011 |
Mobile augmented reality: video prototyping M de Sá, J Antin, D Shamma, EF Churchill Proceedings of the 2011 annual conference extended abstracts on Human … |
2011 |
My kind of people?: perceptions about wikipedia contributors and their motivations J Antin Proceedings of the 2011 annual conference on Human factors in computing … |
2011 |
Workshop on online reputation: context, privacy, and reputation management J Antin, EF Churchill, BC Chen Proceedings of the 20th international conference companion on World wide web … |
2011 |
Technology-Mediated Contributions: Editing Behaviors Among New Wikipedians J Antin, C Cheshire, O Nov |
2011 |
Automatic identification of personal insults on social news sites SO Sood, EF Churchill, J Antin Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology |
2011 |
Badges in social media: A social psychological perspective J Antin, E Churchill Human Factors, 1-4 |
2011 |
Toy Psychology-Using gaming tactics to shape our online behavior may not be as effective as some have hoped. J Antin Technology Review-Massachussets Institute ofTechnology-English Edition, 11 |
2011 |
General and Familiar Trust in Websites C Cheshire, J Antin, KS Cook, E Churchill Knowledge, Technology & Policy, 1-21 |
2010 |
Everyday favors: A case study of a local online gift exchange system E Suhonen, A Lampinen, C Cheshire, J Antin Proceedings of the 16th ACM international conference on Supporting group … |
2010 |
Behaviors, adverse events, and dispositions: An empirical study of online discretion and information control C Cheshire, J Antin, E Churchill Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61 (7 … |
2010 |
NONE OF US IS AS LAZY AS ALL OF US C Cheshire, J Antin Information, Communication & Society 13 (4), 537-555 |
2010 |
With a little help from my friends: Self‐interested and prosocial behavior on MySpace Music J Antin, M Earp Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61 (5 … |
2010 |