The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia

Abstract Wikipedia articles are written by teams of independent volunteers in the absence of formal hierarchical organizational structures. How is coordination achieved under such conditions of extreme decentralization? Building on studies on the organization of dominance relations in animal and hum...

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Main Authors: Jürgen Lerner, Alessandro Lomi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-07-01
Series:Applied Network Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41109-017-0043-2
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spelling doaj-d1434651a9724fc1a94318917b33cf9d2020-11-24T22:25:14ZengSpringerOpenApplied Network Science2364-82282017-07-012113010.1007/s41109-017-0043-2The Third Man: hierarchy formation in WikipediaJürgen Lerner0Alessandro Lomi1Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Konstanz, Universitätsstr. 10Faculty of Economics, Università della Svizzera italiana, Via Buffi 13Abstract Wikipedia articles are written by teams of independent volunteers in the absence of formal hierarchical organizational structures. How is coordination achieved under such conditions of extreme decentralization? Building on studies on the organization of dominance relations in animal and human societies, we theorize that coordination in Wikipedia is made possible by an emergent hierarchical order sustained by self-organizing sequences of text editing events. We propose a new method to turn the editing history of Wikipedia pages into an evolving multiplex network resulting from three types of interaction events: dyadic undo, dyadic redo, and third-party based edit events. We develop new relational event models for signed networks that specify how the probability of observing various types of edit events depends on their embeddedness in sequences of past edit events. Using a random sample of page histories comprising 12,719 revisions produced by 7,657 unique users, we examine the relation between theoretically defined sequences of text editing events, and the emergence of linear dominance hierarchies that regulate production relations within Wikipedia. We find evidence that dyadic interaction gives rise to systematic extra-dyadic dependence structures that are partially consistent with a hierarchical interpretation of the Wikipedia editing network. We support and complement the statistical analysis of multiplex event networks with data visualizations that provide qualitative validation of our main results.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41109-017-0043-2Hierarchy formationOnline collaboration networksOpen productionRelational event modelsWikipedia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jürgen Lerner
Alessandro Lomi
spellingShingle Jürgen Lerner
Alessandro Lomi
The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
Applied Network Science
Hierarchy formation
Online collaboration networks
Open production
Relational event models
Wikipedia
author_facet Jürgen Lerner
Alessandro Lomi
author_sort Jürgen Lerner
title The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
title_short The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
title_full The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
title_fullStr The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
title_full_unstemmed The Third Man: hierarchy formation in Wikipedia
title_sort third man: hierarchy formation in wikipedia
publisher SpringerOpen
series Applied Network Science
issn 2364-8228
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Wikipedia articles are written by teams of independent volunteers in the absence of formal hierarchical organizational structures. How is coordination achieved under such conditions of extreme decentralization? Building on studies on the organization of dominance relations in animal and human societies, we theorize that coordination in Wikipedia is made possible by an emergent hierarchical order sustained by self-organizing sequences of text editing events. We propose a new method to turn the editing history of Wikipedia pages into an evolving multiplex network resulting from three types of interaction events: dyadic undo, dyadic redo, and third-party based edit events. We develop new relational event models for signed networks that specify how the probability of observing various types of edit events depends on their embeddedness in sequences of past edit events. Using a random sample of page histories comprising 12,719 revisions produced by 7,657 unique users, we examine the relation between theoretically defined sequences of text editing events, and the emergence of linear dominance hierarchies that regulate production relations within Wikipedia. We find evidence that dyadic interaction gives rise to systematic extra-dyadic dependence structures that are partially consistent with a hierarchical interpretation of the Wikipedia editing network. We support and complement the statistical analysis of multiplex event networks with data visualizations that provide qualitative validation of our main results.
topic Hierarchy formation
Online collaboration networks
Open production
Relational event models
Wikipedia
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41109-017-0043-2
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