Entry requirements and membership homogeneity in online patient groups.

Roy Rada
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The objective was to explore a relationship between the economics of religion and the attributes of online patient groups by testing the hypotheses that (1) the harsher the entry requirements to an online patient group, the more active its members are; and (2) membership homogeneity in a given group is reflected in the educational level of group members. Online groups were randomly chosen from the 'Yahoo groups' category of 'Illnesses'. The hypothesis about entry requirements was narrowed by defining those requirements as either 'Open', 'Register', or 'Closed'. The number of messages over a 4-month period in each of 162 different groups was tallied. The hypothesis about membership homogeneity was refined by counting the citations in messages and by predicting the educational level of members (as reflected in the average word length of messages) based on these citation counts. Across 162 groups, the number of messages was significantly less in Open groups than in Register groups and less in Register groups than in Closed groups. Across 14 groups, the average word length of messages in a group positively correlated with the number of citations in that group. The hypothesis is supported that increased group entry barriers correspond to increased group message activity and members tend to be similar within a group. These attributes could be used to help design effective groups.

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在线患者群体的入组要求和成员同质性。
研究的目的是通过检验以下假设来探索宗教经济学与在线患者群体属性之间的关系:(1)对在线患者群体的准入要求越严格,其成员就越活跃;(2)群体成员的同质性体现在群体成员的受教育程度上。在线群组是从“雅虎群组”的“疾病”类别中随机选择的。通过将这些要求定义为“开放”、“注册”或“关闭”,关于入学要求的假设被缩小了。在4个月的时间里,162个不同的组中每个组的信息数量都被统计了出来。通过统计消息中的引用数,并根据这些引用数预测成员的教育水平(反映在消息的平均单词长度中),对成员同质性假设进行了改进。在162个组中,开放组的消息数量明显少于注册组,注册组的消息数量明显少于关闭组。在14个小组中,一组信息的平均单词长度与该组中被引用的次数呈正相关。这一假设得到了支持,即增加的群体进入壁垒对应于增加的群体信息活动,并且群体内的成员倾向于相似。这些属性可以用来帮助设计有效的小组。
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