Social Sourcing: Incorporating Social Networks Into Crowdsourcing Contest Design
Qi Shi, Dong Hao

TL;DR
This paper introduces social network-based mechanisms for crowdsourcing contests, demonstrating how social ties influence participation and performance, leading to larger crowds and better outcomes.
Contribution
It models social ties in crowdsourcing contests, proposes two new mechanisms with equilibrium analysis, and develops algorithms for large-scale implementation.
Findings
Social ties significantly increase participant numbers.
New mechanisms achieve better contest outcomes.
Algorithms effectively compute equilibria in large networks.
Abstract
In a crowdsourcing contest, a principal holding a task posts it to a crowd. People in the crowd then compete with each other to win the rewards. Although in real life, a crowd is usually networked and people influence each other via social ties, existing crowdsourcing contest theories do not aim to answer how interpersonal relationships influence people's incentives and behaviors and thereby affect the crowdsourcing performance. In this work, we novelly take people's social ties as a key factor in the modeling and designing of agents' incentives in crowdsourcing contests. We establish two contest mechanisms by which the principal can impel the agents to invite their neighbors to contribute to the task. The first mechanism has a symmetric Bayesian Nash equilibrium, and it is very simple for agents to play and easy for the principal to predict the contest performance. The second mechanism…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpen Source Software Innovations · Digital Marketing and Social Media · Knowledge Management and Sharing
