Designing a Successful Collaborative Wiki: The Choice between Outcome Quality and Online Community Needs
Designing a collaborative platform that produces project outcomes of high quality and allows for wisdom of the crowds to come together in the achievement of a common goal can be a challenge. Literature often addresses the interplay between designing for online community needs and outcome/product quality as coexistence, where design implementations in one positively affect the other. However, Human-Computer Interaction research has shown that performance and satisfaction need not be dependent on each other. This paper performs a theoretical analysis of the literature on the topic and identifies design gaps for collaborative projects. Findings derived by this theoretical analysis challenge existing design perspectives by demonstrating that there is often a tradeoff between designing for online community needs and outcome quality for these projects. Claims were developed that lead to research questions identifying the most important elements and design considerations are provided along with potential future directions for advancing the understanding of this relationship.
Year of publication: |
2017
|
---|---|
Authors: | Tsikerdekis, Michail |
Published in: |
International Journal of Technology and Human Interaction (IJTHI). - IGI Global, ISSN 1548-3916, ZDB-ID 2401009-1. - Vol. 13.2017, 2 (01.04.), p. 22-39
|
Publisher: |
IGI Global |
Subject: | Collaborative Project | Community Design | Online Community Needs | Outcome Quality | Wikipedia |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
HORIZON: A Development Methodology for Collaborative Projects
Catarci, Tiziana, (2015)
-
A SVM Surrogate Model Based Method for Yield Optimization in Electronic Circuit Design
Ciccazzo, Angelo, (2015)
-
Community design and how much we drive
Marshall, Wesley, (2012)
- More ...
Similar items by person