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CHI
2009
ACM

Making sense of strangers' expertise from signals in digital artifacts

14 years 4 months ago
Making sense of strangers' expertise from signals in digital artifacts
Contemporary work increasingly involves interacting with strangers in technology-mediated environments. In this context, we come to rely on digital artifacts to infer characteristics of other people. This paper reports the results of a study conducted in a global company that used expertise search as a vehicle for exploring how people interpret a range of information available in online profiles in evaluating whom to interact with for expertise. Using signaling theory as a conceptual framework, we describe how certain `signals' in various social software are hard to fake, and are thus more reliable indicators of expertise. Multi-level regression analysis revealed that participation in social software, social connection information, and selfdescribed expertise in the corporate directory were significantly helpful in the decision to contact someone for expertise. Qualitative analysis provided further insights regarding the interpretations people form of others' expertise from ...
N. Sadat Shami, Kate Ehrlich, Geri Gay, Jeffrey T.
Added 24 Nov 2009
Updated 24 Nov 2009
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where CHI
Authors N. Sadat Shami, Kate Ehrlich, Geri Gay, Jeffrey T. Hancock
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