Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study

Online social networks have emerged as effective crowdsourcing media to recruit participants in recent days. However, issues regarding how to effectively exploit them have not been adequately addressed yet. In this paper, we investigate the reliability and effectiveness of multimedia-involved behavi...

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Main Authors: Jun-Ho eChoi, Jong-Seok eLee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01991/full
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spelling doaj-1f373f1516a948cbb734d8ea1f4d7ba02020-11-24T21:17:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-01-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.01991164598Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical studyJun-Ho eChoi0Jun-Ho eChoi1Jong-Seok eLee2Jong-Seok eLee3Yonsei UniversityYonsei UniversityYonsei UniversityYonsei UniversityOnline social networks have emerged as effective crowdsourcing media to recruit participants in recent days. However, issues regarding how to effectively exploit them have not been adequately addressed yet. In this paper, we investigate the reliability and effectiveness of multimedia-involved behavioral testing via social network-based crowdsourcing, especially focused on Facebook as a medium to recruit participants. We conduct a crowdsourcing-based experiment for a music recommendation problem. It is shown that different advertisement methods yield different degrees of efficiency and there exist significant differences in behavioral patterns across different genders and different age groups. In addition, we perform a comparison of our experiment with other multimedia-involved crowdsourcing experiments built on Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk), which suggests that crowdsourcing-based experiments using social networks for recruitment can achieve comparable efficiency. Based on the analysis results, advantages and disadvantages of social network-based crowdsourcing and suggestions for successful experiments are also discussed. We conclude that social networks have the potential to support multimedia-involved behavioral tests to gather in-depth data even for long-term periods.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01991/fullmusic information retrievalSocial networkSocial media advertisingBehavioral testingvoluntary involvementcrowdsourcing experiment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jun-Ho eChoi
Jun-Ho eChoi
Jong-Seok eLee
Jong-Seok eLee
spellingShingle Jun-Ho eChoi
Jun-Ho eChoi
Jong-Seok eLee
Jong-Seok eLee
Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
Frontiers in Psychology
music information retrieval
Social network
Social media advertising
Behavioral testing
voluntary involvement
crowdsourcing experiment
author_facet Jun-Ho eChoi
Jun-Ho eChoi
Jong-Seok eLee
Jong-Seok eLee
author_sort Jun-Ho eChoi
title Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
title_short Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
title_full Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
title_fullStr Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
title_full_unstemmed Online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: An empirical study
title_sort online social networks for crowdsourced multimedia-involved behavioral testing: an empirical study
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Online social networks have emerged as effective crowdsourcing media to recruit participants in recent days. However, issues regarding how to effectively exploit them have not been adequately addressed yet. In this paper, we investigate the reliability and effectiveness of multimedia-involved behavioral testing via social network-based crowdsourcing, especially focused on Facebook as a medium to recruit participants. We conduct a crowdsourcing-based experiment for a music recommendation problem. It is shown that different advertisement methods yield different degrees of efficiency and there exist significant differences in behavioral patterns across different genders and different age groups. In addition, we perform a comparison of our experiment with other multimedia-involved crowdsourcing experiments built on Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk), which suggests that crowdsourcing-based experiments using social networks for recruitment can achieve comparable efficiency. Based on the analysis results, advantages and disadvantages of social network-based crowdsourcing and suggestions for successful experiments are also discussed. We conclude that social networks have the potential to support multimedia-involved behavioral tests to gather in-depth data even for long-term periods.
topic music information retrieval
Social network
Social media advertising
Behavioral testing
voluntary involvement
crowdsourcing experiment
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01991/full
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