What is it about?
Members of distributed groups need to share language to coordinate their actions. We studied the process by which a group developed a shared set of terms, i.e., a folksonomy (a user-generated classification scheme). We conceptualized the folksonomy as both an interpretive schema that guided the volunteers work and also a result of that work. We studied the process of folksonomy creation in a citizen science project called Gravity Spy in which volunteers come up with new terms for classes of glitches (noise events in the detector) and identified several processes by which individually-created terms come to be shared. However, we also noted that a lack of norms about and authority to impose use undermined the power of the folksonomy.
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Why is it important?
Our results help us understand the work of the volunteers in the project and have implications for system design. Systems need to facilitate 1) tag gardening, a process of consolidating overlapping terms; 2) demarcate a clear home for discourses around folksonomy disagreements; 3) highlight clearly when decisions have been reached; and 4) inform others about those decisions.
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This page is a summary of: Folksonomies to Support Coordination and Coordination of Folksonomies, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), May 2018, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s10606-018-9327-z.
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