Community research venues

From CommunityData

Finding research

One approach to making use of research in communities is to keep an eye on specific conferences and journals that publish this type of work. Some of these publishing outlets are open access, and often pre-prints are available (i.e. a free 'just-before-published' copy). You can scan the titles and abstracts for work of interest and then dig up the article, a blog post related to the article, or a video of the work being presented. The authors of the work will (almost) always be thrilled to hear from you if you reach out to ask a question or request a copy of the article.

Finding answers

If you have a specific question and want to understand the evidence associated with that question, you might find Google Scholar a helpful resource -- whereas a general Google search may yield you a range of opinions, looking at academic articles will give you a sense of what people find when they take a more rigorous approach. You can filter by year and make use of quotation marks. For example, a search like "code of conduct" diversity "open source" might help inform a discussion on whether codes of conduct in open source projects have a role to play in increasing diversity (short answer: a CoC can help, but it's not a guarantee).

Venues and sources

Here are some places that publish research about online communities. Trolling through their annual programs or journal issues is one way to keep up to date on research findings. Generally there will be a link to a list of accepted papers, or a set of links to various categories of accepted papers, or a link to a program.

Online communities

  • ICWSM
  • CHI -- ACM Computer-Human Interaction. Sample titles:
    • "Coordination and Collaboration: How do Volunteer Moderators Work as Team in Live Streaming Communities?"
    • "Community Resilience: Quantifying the Disruptive Effects of Sudden Spikes in Activity within Online Communities"
    • "ARMY's Magic Shop: Understanding the Collaborative Construction of Playful Places in Online Communities"
    • "Follow the Leader: Technical and Inspirational Leadership in Open Source Software"
  • CSCW -- ACM Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing. Sample titles: "More than a Modern Day Green Book: Exploring the Online Community of Black Twitter", "Many Destinations, Many Pathways: A Quantitative Analysis of Legitimate Peripheral Participation in Scratch", "The Signals that Potential Contributors Look for When Choosing Open-source Projects"
  • AOIR
  • Transactions on Social Computing
  • GROUP

Software engineering focused, but often include social/community aspects

  • ICSE - especially 'ICSE-SEIS' -- ICSE is International Conference on Software Egningeering and SEIS is 'Software Engineering in Society'. Sample titles:
    • "Gender Representation Among Contributors to Open-Source Infrastructure - An Analysis of 20 Package Manager Ecosystems"
    • "Hackathons as Inclusive Spaces for Prototyping Software in Open Social Innovation with NGOs"
    • "Rules of Engagement: Why and How Companies Participate in OSS"
  • OpenSym
  • ICSA
  • MSR
  • SANER
  • ICSME -- This is the IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance and Evolution. Sample titles: "What Makes a Good Code Example? A Study of Programming Q&A in StackOverflow" and "On the Use of GitHub Actions in Software Development Repositories"
  • ESEC-FSE -- This is the ACM Joint European Software Engineering Conference and Symposium on the foundations of Software Engineering. Sample titles: "A Case Study of Implicit Mentoring, Its Prevalence, and Impact in Apache", "Corporate Dominance in Open Source Ecosystems: A Case Study of OpenStack", "Tracking Patches for Open Source Software Vulnerabilities"
  • HICCS
  • USENIX