Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
Various methods have been proposed to help find answerers for a question in QA communities, but almost all work heavily depends on users' QA history. In this paper we seek to investigate the feasibility of leveraging users' non-QA social activities as a way of gaining insight into their question answering behavior. We collected data of 4,484 users on a QA community in an enterprise and examined the relationship of their QA behaviors and non-QA activities supported by other social tools. We found that the two sets of behavioral indicators are significantly correlated. The top user group for non-QA activities outperformed lower groups in both number and quality of the answers. Regression analysis showed involvement in personal blog, microblog and forum and replying and recommending behaviors in non-QA communities were predictive of a user's likelihood of answering questions. Online observations provided a qualitative understanding. Design implications and future work were discussed. Copyright 2013 ACM.
Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
Michael Heck, Masayuki Suzuki, et al.
INTERSPEECH 2017
Fan Zhang, Junwei Cao, et al.
IEEE TETC
Jean McKendree, John M. Carroll
CHI 1986