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July 19, 2015 by Gary Price

Research Paper: “The Social World of Content Abusers in Community Question Answering”

July 19, 2015 by Gary Price

The following paper by researchers from Yahoo Labs and the University of South Florida was presented at the 24th International World Wide Web Conference.
Title
The Social World of Content Abusers in Community Question Answering
Authors
Imrul Kayes
University of South Florida
Nicolas Kourtellis
Yahoo Labs
Daniele Quercia
Yahoo Labs
Adriana Iamnitchi
University of South Florida
Francesco Bonchi
Yahoo Labs
Source
via arXiv
Abstract

Community-based question answering platforms can be rich sources of information on a variety of specialized topics, from finance to cooking. The usefulness of such platforms depends heavily on user contributions (questions and answers), but also on respecting the community rules. As a crowd-sourced service, such platforms rely on their users for monitoring and flagging content that violates community rules.
Common wisdom is to eliminate the users who receive many flags. Our analysis of a year of traces from a mature Q&A site shows that the number of flags does not tell the full story: on one hand, users with many flags may still contribute positively to the community. On the other hand, users who never get flagged are found to violate community rules and get their accounts suspended. This analysis, however, also shows that abusive users are betrayed by their network properties: we find strong evidence of homophilous behavior and use this finding to detect abusive users who go under the community radar. Based on our empirical observations, we build a classifier that is able to detect abusive users with an accuracy as high as 83%.

Direct to Full Text Paper (11 pages; PDF)

Filed under: Academic Libraries, Interviews, Journal Articles, News, Patrons and Users, Public Libraries

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About Gary Price

Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.

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