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A Taxonomic Framework for Social Machines

A Taxonomic Framework for Social Machines
A Taxonomic Framework for Social Machines
As the Web has developed into a global social platform there has been increasing interest in a particular class of systems known as 'social machines'. Social machines are typically presented as systems that combine some form of social participation with conventional forms of machine-based 'computation'. Beyond this rather general characterization, however, there is little consensus as to what the term 'social machine' actually means. Furthermore, little has been done to explore the core features of social machines and examine differences between them. This limits our understanding of the kinds of social machines that currently exist, and it also limits our ability to imagine the kinds of social machine that could emerge in the future. In this chapter, we introduce a taxonomy for the description and classification of social machines that could be used to frame future scholarly discourse and identify aspects of the social machine research effort that deserve further consideration. As part of this effort, we propose a definition of social machines that puts them in relation to the broader class of socio-technical systems, while distinguishing them from other kinds of technology-mediated social participation system; for example, human computation systems and collective intelligence systems. The taxonomic framework we present serves to extend our understanding of social machines. It includes a total of 33 dimensions and 106 associated characteristics. Together, these specify the space of all (theoretically possible) social machine types.
social machines, social computing, Web science, collective intelligence, social Web, taxonomy, socio-technical systems, human computation, crowdsourcing
51-85
Springer
Smart, Paul R
cd8a3dbf-d963-4009-80fb-76ecc93579df
Simperl, Elena
40261ae4-c58c-48e4-b78b-5187b10e4f67
Shadbolt, Nigel
5c5acdf4-ad42-49b6-81fe-e9db58c2caf7
Miorandi, Daniele
Maltese, Vincenzo
Rovatsos, Michael
Nijholt, Anton
Stewart, James
Smart, Paul R
cd8a3dbf-d963-4009-80fb-76ecc93579df
Simperl, Elena
40261ae4-c58c-48e4-b78b-5187b10e4f67
Shadbolt, Nigel
5c5acdf4-ad42-49b6-81fe-e9db58c2caf7
Miorandi, Daniele
Maltese, Vincenzo
Rovatsos, Michael
Nijholt, Anton
Stewart, James

Smart, Paul R, Simperl, Elena and Shadbolt, Nigel (2014) A Taxonomic Framework for Social Machines. In, Miorandi, Daniele, Maltese, Vincenzo, Rovatsos, Michael, Nijholt, Anton and Stewart, James (eds.) Social Collective Intelligence: Combining the Powers of Humans and Machines to Build a Smarter Society. Berlin, Germany. Springer, pp. 51-85. (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_3).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

As the Web has developed into a global social platform there has been increasing interest in a particular class of systems known as 'social machines'. Social machines are typically presented as systems that combine some form of social participation with conventional forms of machine-based 'computation'. Beyond this rather general characterization, however, there is little consensus as to what the term 'social machine' actually means. Furthermore, little has been done to explore the core features of social machines and examine differences between them. This limits our understanding of the kinds of social machines that currently exist, and it also limits our ability to imagine the kinds of social machine that could emerge in the future. In this chapter, we introduce a taxonomy for the description and classification of social machines that could be used to frame future scholarly discourse and identify aspects of the social machine research effort that deserve further consideration. As part of this effort, we propose a definition of social machines that puts them in relation to the broader class of socio-technical systems, while distinguishing them from other kinds of technology-mediated social participation system; for example, human computation systems and collective intelligence systems. The taxonomic framework we present serves to extend our understanding of social machines. It includes a total of 33 dimensions and 106 associated characteristics. Together, these specify the space of all (theoretically possible) social machine types.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 August 2014
Published date: 1 October 2014
Keywords: social machines, social computing, Web science, collective intelligence, social Web, taxonomy, socio-technical systems, human computation, crowdsourcing
Organisations: Web & Internet Science

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 362359
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362359
PURE UUID: 0d408c72-8728-49d4-9f5e-770bec4edd68
ORCID for Paul R Smart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9989-5307
ORCID for Elena Simperl: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1722-947X

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2014 16:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:15

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Contributors

Author: Paul R Smart ORCID iD
Author: Elena Simperl ORCID iD
Author: Nigel Shadbolt
Editor: Daniele Miorandi
Editor: Vincenzo Maltese
Editor: Michael Rovatsos
Editor: Anton Nijholt
Editor: James Stewart

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