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Collaborative Authoring Environments

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Presentation on theme: "Collaborative Authoring Environments"— Presentation transcript:

1 Collaborative Authoring Environments
Experiences? Asynchronous vs. synchronous editing How to convey the efforts of others? Tracking changes Indications of real-time edits How to manage the potential for conflicting edits? Locking at different levels of granularity But that can be very frustrating for users

2 Operational Transformation (OT)
Pioneered by Ellis and Gibbs in GROVE (1989) The problem Initial algorithms did not guarantee convergence (i.e. consistency) for 3 or more editors

3 History of Wikis In 1995, Ward Cunningham invented a type of website software That allowed anyone to modify the site’s content So this “WikiWikiWeb” could grow naturally and efficiently Back to idea from earlier hypertext systems that readers should also be writers About that name

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5 Wikis Wikis are collaboratively authored resources
Are often used for (fairly) objective content User manuals Wikipedia Fan / player sites Include facilities for collaboration More than a collaborative editor Talk pages History pages

6 Wikis Today Dozens of wiki engines & wiki companies on the market, including: “Enterprise wikis” – software for company intranets Socialtext, confluence Free wiki hosting services – Jotspot, Wikia, Wetpaint Or, download & install your own: Mediawiki, PhpWiki, Kwiki etc. And dozens of communities.... Including Wikipedia – well known and enormous

7 Communicating in Wikipedia
The talk pages Page history The Village pump (non-article discussions) The bulletin board Comment pages Mailing lists IRC (internet relay chat) channels

8 Community Self-Regulation
Quality control features: recent changes, watch lists, related changes, page histories, user contributions lists Community features: talk pages, user profiles, access levels, user-to-user , message notification, RFC, mediation, arbitration. 3RR rule (no more than 3 reverts on a single page)

9 Comparing Versions

10 Revision History

11 Rolling Back Versions

12 Community Organization
Example: Articles For Deletion

13 Community Organization
Example: Featured Article Candidates

14 History Flow Visualization of Wiki Edits

15 Wikipedia article on chocolate
Zigzag pattern = argument over certain type of surrealist sculpture exists or not.

16 Controversial Topics Lead to Social Issues
Article on abortion Black gashes show points where article has been deleted and replaced with offensive comments These vandalisms common on controversial articles

17 But Not Just Controversial Topics
Article on “history” Black slice shows when a user replaced entire article with word “ha”

18 Core Issues & Solutions
Socially-constructed text are often open to anyone, “if anyone can edit my text, anyone can ruin my text” Changes are logged, authors are notified, pages can be restored Authority is unclear – who “owns” a collaborative document?  Copyleft, Creative Commons, Public Domain Openness is at odds with typical work habits Norms are constantly enforced through permanent editing process and agency of socially approved members (e.g., the sysops)

19 Building on Social Media
Mining and automatic interpretation Information retrieval techniques Language-aware techniques Personalizing Information filtering (Infoscope) Information visualization Content Temporal change Connections

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21 Visualizing a Collection of Texts

22 Visualizing Time and Content

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24 Visualizing Connections

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28 Social Media A wide variety supporting different categories of communication Social media enable new roles based on scale and controls Mining and visualization support access and create new (meta-)media forms


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