What you think and what I think: Studying intersubjectivity in knowledge artifacts evaluation
- UNCG Author/Contributor (non-UNCG co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
- Rahul Singh, Associate Professor (Creator)
- Xia Zhao, Associate Professor (Creator)
- Institution
- The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG )
- Web Site: http://library.uncg.edu/
Abstract: Miscalibration, the failure to accurately evaluate one’s own work relative to others' evaluation, is a common concern in social systems of knowledge creation where participants act as both creators and evaluators. Theories of social norming hold that individual’s self-evaluation miscalibration diminishes over multiple iterations of creator-evaluator interactions and shared understanding emerges. This paper explores intersubjectivity and the longitudinal dynamics of miscalibration between creators' and evaluators' assessments in IT-enabled social knowledge creation and refinement systems. Using Latent Growth Modeling, we investigated dynamics of creator’s assessments of their own knowledge artifacts compared to peer evaluators' to determine whether miscalibration attenuates over multiple interactions. Contrary to theory, we found that creator’s self-assessment miscalibration does not attenuate over repeated interactions. Moreover, depending on the degree of difference, we found self-assessment miscalibration to amplify over time with knowledge artifact creators' diverging farther from their peers' collective opinion. Deeper analysis found no significant evidence of the influence of bias and controversy on miscalibration. Therefore, relying on social norming to correct miscalibration in knowledge creation environments (e.g., social media interactions) may not function as expected.
What you think and what I think: Studying intersubjectivity in knowledge artifacts evaluation
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Created on 7/12/2016
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Additional Information
- Publication
- Information Systems Frontiers
- Language: English
- Date: 2015
- Keywords
- Intersubjectivity, Miscalibration, Longitudinal analysis, Knowledge artifacts, Peer-evaluation, Latent classes