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| My theory on online communities I had an interesting discussion going on in my forum. Since Daniweb does not allow URLs, I will paste my message which I wrote on my forum and which I consider as my theory of online forums. Quote:
Any particular online community attracts people of not only similar interest but also people of similar levels of intelligence. In other words, the lowest common level of shared knowledge and intelligence of an online community determines not only how many people contribute to the community but also what kind of people contribute to it. What are your thoughts on this? :) |
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| Re: My theory on online communities Quote:
I believe level of intelligence is a limited reason a community sticks together. Of course, those who cannot operate a computer because of mental capacity, or lack there of, will clearly be excluded. You are suggesting that in a Harley Davidson community most people are at the same intelligence level; how about a Lexus fan club; what about a cooking forum; how about a dating site? One of the many reasons a community gets together is shared or common (amongst members) experiences. Those experiences do not require intelligence. I am an ex-member of Mensa (too boring!). Does that suggest that all other members here are Mensa material? (No disrespect to others :cheesy: ) |
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| Re: My theory on online communities I think you misunderstand my theory to mean something very literal. Not so. I am talking about high probabilities and not certainties. It is not a hard-and-fast rule that each and every member has to be of exactly same intelligence levels. It is a general observation and a theory of numbers and a strong probability. Individual members cannot be judged. Overall the majority of active members of any particular community will share similar intelligence levels. I have researched a lot into this. Individuals, certainly are different from one another. But I am talking about the overall picture. Believe me, I know what I'm talking about and I have observed this pattern in a lot of forums. |
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| Re: My theory on online communities Quote:
communities that require certain high level knowledge, such as surgeons discussion forum, or senior executive forum, will require a high level of knowledge of the subject matter. to get to that point most members would had to go through extensive education. But I do not equate knowledge with intelligence. Even if statistically proven that a forum have members with the similar intelligence level, this does not imply that membership is directly related to intelligence level! More likely intelligence level directly relates to the requirements of understanding the subject matter of the community. But I would be extreemly cautious to suggest that we should infer a same level of intelligence is a good thing in a community. From my perspective, I would consider that to be a devastating problem. I think one of a good community leader's responsibility is to to increase diversity in a community, within the topic of the community of course. |
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| Re: My theory on online communities Quote:
You continue to misunderstand my hypothesis (which I have researched quite a lot, thank you) which is a broad theory of probabilities not certainties. I certainly did not say that *every* member of a community will have equal intelligence levels. It is quite foolish to think so. My theory can be written from the user's perspective as: At any given time, I, as an individual, am more likely to join a community which offers a level of collective intelligence that is closer to my own than choosing a community that has a far higher or lower level of collective intelligence than my own. As I have been studying this phenomenon in depth, I can certainly confirm that this seems to be the case more often than not. Anyway, you seem to be quite close minded about this, so I cannot convince you, but believe me. It's not just a mere fancy on my part. I have researched online forums a lot by going through several of them thread by thread and inferring how members interact with one another. |
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------------------------- I think online communities lean are more in line with Groupthink then Collective Intelligence. The luck with online communities is the loss of fringe members, and often the death of consenus prior to the "risky shift" as Janis described it. Even more importantly, communities usually have a single individual who will make final decisions, and can circumvent the consensus results. One of the reasons I cannot label communities having collective intelligence, because most communities lack an external common goal (unless their purpose is such). Most communities cater to the individual member needs. For example, your Linux communities might have a very high collective intelligence if used to develop a new Linux standard, and as such would HAVE a collective intelligence. Some theorists measure it as "cooperation quotient". this measure presumes all suggestions or comments are taken at equal value. I have never seen a community as such. I will not discard the fact that potential members do look at intelligence of the leaders (which is an indication of groupthink) in their posts. They almost always join groups where they will gain additional intelligence. |
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| Re: My theory on online communities Thanks Libertate! Some very interesting thoughts. Mind you, my research is not totally objective by any means (because as you say it is hard to quantify such things). But overall I have noticed that the "tolerance" levels of online communities to people who think at different levels of intelligence vary from one community to another. It is very difficult to judge in a technical community like Daniweb because the subject is much wider and you will have everybody from the lowest novice to the highest expert populating these forums. My theory I suppose is more accurate in the case of non-technical, topical community forums where the interaction is much more on a subjective level than say, a technical, non-personal interchange of information. I'm still learning and trying to analyze the behaviour of online forums and will be improving my theory as I go along. |
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