PUMA publications for /author/Aniket%20Kittur/socialhttps://puma.uni-kassel.de/author/Aniket%20Kittur/socialPUMA RSS feed for /author/Aniket%20Kittur/social2024-03-19T05:15:42+01:00CrowdForge: crowdsourcing complex workhttps://puma.uni-kassel.de/bibtex/2e1022258d8e73b250ff625ce2e10095b/jaeschkejaeschke2012-06-05T08:08:34+02:00crowdsourcing human intelligence social computing cirg collective <span class="authorEditorList"><span itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemscope="itemscope" itemprop="author"><a title="Aniket Kittur" itemprop="url" href="/author/Aniket%20Kittur"><span itemprop="name">A. Kittur</span></a></span>, <span itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemscope="itemscope" itemprop="author"><a title="Boris Smus" itemprop="url" href="/author/Boris%20Smus"><span itemprop="name">B. Smus</span></a></span>, <span itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemscope="itemscope" itemprop="author"><a title="Susheel Khamkar" itemprop="url" href="/author/Susheel%20Khamkar"><span itemprop="name">S. Khamkar</span></a></span>, und <span itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemscope="itemscope" itemprop="author"><a title="Robert E. Kraut" itemprop="url" href="/author/Robert%20E.%20Kraut"><span itemprop="name">R. Kraut</span></a></span>. </span><span itemtype="http://schema.org/Book" itemscope="itemscope" itemprop="isPartOf"><em><span itemprop="name">Proceedings of the 24th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology</span>, </em></span><em>Seite <span itemprop="pagination">43--52</span>. </em><em>New York, NY, USA, </em><em><span itemprop="publisher">ACM</span>, </em>(<em><span>2011<meta content="2011" itemprop="datePublished"/></span></em>)Tue Jun 05 08:08:34 CEST 2012New York, NY, USAProceedings of the 24th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology43--52CrowdForge: crowdsourcing complex work2011crowdsourcing human intelligence social computing cirg collective Micro-task markets such as Amazon's Mechanical Turk represent a new paradigm for accomplishing work, in which employers can tap into a large population of workers around the globe to accomplish tasks in a fraction of the time and money of more traditional methods. However, such markets have been primarily used for simple, independent tasks, such as labeling an image or judging the relevance of a search result. Here we present a general purpose framework for accomplishing complex and interdependent tasks using micro-task markets. We describe our framework, a web-based prototype, and case studies on article writing, decision making, and science journalism that demonstrate the benefits and limitations of the approach.