Externalities in Knowledge Production: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment

03/02/2019
by   Marit Hinnosaar, et al.
0

Are there positive or negative externalities in knowledge production? Do current contributions to knowledge production increase or decrease the future growth of knowledge? We use a randomized field experiment, which added relevant content to some pages in Wikipedia while leaving similar pages unchanged. We find that the addition of content has a negligible impact on the subsequent long-run growth of content. Our results have implications for information seeding and incentivizing contributions, implying that additional content does not generate sizable externalities by inspiring nor discouraging future contributions.

READ FULL TEXT
research
06/04/2018

How Content Volume on Landing Pages Influences Consumer Behavior

Does more information elicit users compliance and engagement, or the oth...
research
04/24/2023

Generating Topic Pages for Scientific Concepts Using Scientific Publications

In this paper, we describe Topic Pages, an inventory of scientific conce...
research
05/15/2021

Content Analysis Application in Nursing: A Synthetic Knowledge Synthesis Meta-Study

Theoretical issues: With the explosive growth in the research literature...
research
08/25/2022

Growth Rates of Knowledge

This is an evolving document. It is devoted to summarizing patterns and ...
research
06/11/2019

StRE: Self Attentive Edit Quality Prediction in Wikipedia

Wikipedia can easily be justified as a behemoth, considering the sheer v...
research
11/20/2021

The Hidden Costs of Requiring Accounts: Quasi-Experimental Evidence From Peer Production

Online communities, like Wikipedia, produce valuable public information ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset