Latent Structure in Collaboration: The Case of Reddit r/place

Authors

  • Jérémie Rappaz EPFL
  • Michele Catasta Stanford University
  • Robert West EPFL
  • Karl Aberer EPFL

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v12i1.15013

Keywords:

online collaboration, self-organization, emergent behavior, social dynamics, embedding methods, ranking methods

Abstract

Many Web platforms rely on user collaboration to generate high-quality content: Wiki, Q\&A communities, etc. Understanding and modeling the different collaborative behaviors is therefore critical. However, collaboration patterns are difficult to capture when the relationships between users are not directly observable, since they need to be inferred from the user actions. In this work, we propose a solution to this problem by adopting a systemic view of collaboration. Rather than modeling the users as independent actors in the system, we capture their coordinated actions with embedding methods which can, in turn, identify shared objectives and predict future user actions. To validate our approach, we perform a study on a dataset comprising more than 16M user actions, recorded on the online collaborative sandbox Reddit r/place. Participants had access to a drawing canvas where they could change the color of one pixel at every fixed time interval. Users were not grouped in teams nor were given any specific goals, yet they organized themselves into a cohesive social fabric and collaborated to the creation of a multitude of artworks. Our contribution in this paper is multi-fold: i) we perform an in-depth analysis of the Reddit r/place collaborative sandbox, extracting insights about its evolution over time; ii) we propose a predictive method that captures the latent structure of the emergent collaborative efforts; and iii) we show that our method provides an interpretable representation of the social structure.

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Published

2018-06-15

How to Cite

Rappaz, J., Catasta, M., West, R., & Aberer, K. (2018). Latent Structure in Collaboration: The Case of Reddit r/place. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v12i1.15013