Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing
This paper establishes the power of dynamic collaborative task completion among workers for urban mobile crowdsourcing. Collaboration is defined via the notion of peer referrals, whereby a worker who has accepted a location-specific task, but is unlikely to visit that location, offloads the task to...
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sg-smu-ink.sis_research-46312017-04-17T05:57:29Z Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing KANDAPPU, Thivya MISRA, Archan DARATAN, Randy Tandriansyah This paper establishes the power of dynamic collaborative task completion among workers for urban mobile crowdsourcing. Collaboration is defined via the notion of peer referrals, whereby a worker who has accepted a location-specific task, but is unlikely to visit that location, offloads the task to a willing friend. Such a collaborative framework might be particularly useful for task bundles, especially for bundles that have higher geographic dispersion. The challenge, however, comes from the high similarity observed in the spatiotemporal pattern of task completion among friends. Using extensive real-world crowd-sourcing studies conducted over 7 weeks and 1000+ workers on a campus-based crowd-sourcing platform, we quantify the effect of such "task completion homophily", and show that incorporating such peer-preferences can improve worker-specific models of task preferences by over 30%. We then show that such collaborative offloading works in spite of such spatio-temporal similarity, primarily because workers refer tasks to their close friends, who in turn perform such peer-requested tasks (with over 95% completion rate) even if they experience detours that are significantly larger (often more than twice) than what they normally tolerate for platform-recommended tasks. 2017-02-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/3629 info:doi/10.1145/2998181.2998311 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/4631/viewcontent/cscwp524_kandappuA1.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Collaboration Crowd-sourcing Homophily Social-ties Databases and Information Systems Software Engineering |
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Collaboration Crowd-sourcing Homophily Social-ties Databases and Information Systems Software Engineering KANDAPPU, Thivya MISRA, Archan DARATAN, Randy Tandriansyah Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
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This paper establishes the power of dynamic collaborative task completion among workers for urban mobile crowdsourcing. Collaboration is defined via the notion of peer referrals, whereby a worker who has accepted a location-specific task, but is unlikely to visit that location, offloads the task to a willing friend. Such a collaborative framework might be particularly useful for task bundles, especially for bundles that have higher geographic dispersion. The challenge, however, comes from the high similarity observed in the spatiotemporal pattern of task completion among friends. Using extensive real-world crowd-sourcing studies conducted over 7 weeks and 1000+ workers on a campus-based crowd-sourcing platform, we quantify the effect of such "task completion homophily", and show that incorporating such peer-preferences can improve worker-specific models of task preferences by over 30%. We then show that such collaborative offloading works in spite of such spatio-temporal similarity, primarily because workers refer tasks to their close friends, who in turn perform such peer-requested tasks (with over 95% completion rate) even if they experience detours that are significantly larger (often more than twice) than what they normally tolerate for platform-recommended tasks. |
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KANDAPPU, Thivya MISRA, Archan DARATAN, Randy Tandriansyah |
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KANDAPPU, Thivya MISRA, Archan DARATAN, Randy Tandriansyah |
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KANDAPPU, Thivya |
title |
Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
title_short |
Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
title_full |
Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
title_fullStr |
Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
title_full_unstemmed |
Collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
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collaboration trumps homophily in urban mobile crowd-sourcing |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2017 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/3629 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/4631/viewcontent/cscwp524_kandappuA1.pdf |
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