articleFeb 11, 2012Closed access

Social coding in GitHub

Carnegie Mellon University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Social applications on the web let users track and follow the activities of a large number of others regardless of location or affiliation. There is a potential for this transparency to radically improve collaboration and learning in complex knowledge-based activities. Based on a series of in-depth interviews with central and peripheral GitHub users, we examined the value of transparency for large-scale distributed collaborations and communities of practice. We find that people make a surprisingly rich set of social inferences from the networked activity information in GitHub, such as inferring someone else's technical goals and vision when they edit code, or guessing which of several similar projects has the…

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977
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105.95
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Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
  • Thriving
  • Reputation
  • Transparency (behavior)
  • World Wide Web
  • Coding (social sciences)
  • Data science
  • Set (abstract data type)
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