Social Network Structure as a Critical Success Condition for Virtual Communities
D. Hinds, and R. Lee. Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Proceedings of the 41st Annual, page 323-323. (2008)
DOI: 10.1109/HICSS.2008.404
Abstract
Virtual communities have become an important new organizational form and yet relatively little is known about the conditions which lead to their success. In an attempt to address this knowledge gap, a particular subset of virtual communities - open source software project communities - is investigated and four hypotheses are asserted which relate social network structure to community success. The hypotheses, which are based on social network theory and related research, suggest that success is supported by high levels of affiliation with other communities, moderate levels of density within the network of community conversations, moderate levels of density in the communications between peripheral members and core members, and low levels of density in the communications between administrators and the rest of the community. Empirical research is underway to test these hypotheses based on a sample of over 200 open source software project communities.
Description
Welcome to IEEE Xplore 2.0: Social Network Structure as a Critical Success Condition for Virtual Communities
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Hinds:2008
%A Hinds, David
%A Lee, Ronald M.
%B Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Proceedings of the 41st Annual
%D 2008
%K research.web20.communities study.web20
%P 323-323
%R 10.1109/HICSS.2008.404
%T Social Network Structure as a Critical Success Condition for Virtual Communities
%U http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=4438696&arnumber=4439028&count=502&index=331
%X Virtual communities have become an important new organizational form and yet relatively little is known about the conditions which lead to their success. In an attempt to address this knowledge gap, a particular subset of virtual communities - open source software project communities - is investigated and four hypotheses are asserted which relate social network structure to community success. The hypotheses, which are based on social network theory and related research, suggest that success is supported by high levels of affiliation with other communities, moderate levels of density within the network of community conversations, moderate levels of density in the communications between peripheral members and core members, and low levels of density in the communications between administrators and the rest of the community. Empirical research is underway to test these hypotheses based on a sample of over 200 open source software project communities.
%@ 978-0-7695-3075-8
@inproceedings{Hinds:2008,
abstract = {Virtual communities have become an important new organizational form and yet relatively little is known about the conditions which lead to their success. In an attempt to address this knowledge gap, a particular subset of virtual communities - open source software project communities - is investigated and four hypotheses are asserted which relate social network structure to community success. The hypotheses, which are based on social network theory and related research, suggest that success is supported by high levels of affiliation with other communities, moderate levels of density within the network of community conversations, moderate levels of density in the communications between peripheral members and core members, and low levels of density in the communications between administrators and the rest of the community. Empirical research is underway to test these hypotheses based on a sample of over 200 open source software project communities.},
added-at = {2008-04-26T13:29:34.000+0200},
author = {Hinds, David and Lee, Ronald M.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/22aa6d0a83f1514a4442d35d0e9ade269/msn},
booktitle = {Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Proceedings of the 41st Annual},
description = {Welcome to IEEE Xplore 2.0: Social Network Structure as a Critical Success Condition for Virtual Communities},
doi = {10.1109/HICSS.2008.404},
interhash = {700a203812e659855af9429cea5c34d0},
intrahash = {2aa6d0a83f1514a4442d35d0e9ade269},
isbn = {978-0-7695-3075-8},
issn = {1530-1605},
keywords = {research.web20.communities study.web20},
pages = {323-323},
timestamp = {2009-06-25T15:59:15.000+0200},
title = {Social Network Structure as a Critical Success Condition for Virtual Communities},
url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=4438696&arnumber=4439028&count=502&index=331},
year = 2008
}