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Online team formation in social networks

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TLDR
This paper proposes efficient algorithms that address all requirements of online team formation: these algorithms form teams that always satisfy the required skills, provide approximation guarantees with respect to team communication overhead, and they are online-competitive with Respect to load balancing.
Abstract
We study the problem of online team formation. We consider a setting in which people possess different skills and compatibility among potential team members is modeled by a social network. A sequence of tasks arrives in an online fashion, and each task requires a specific set of skills. The goal is to form a new team upon arrival of each task, so that (i) each team possesses all skills required by the task, (ii) each team has small communication overhead, and (iii) the workload of performing the tasks is balanced among people in the fairest possible way.We propose efficient algorithms that address all these requirements: our algorithms form teams that always satisfy the required skills, provide approximation guarantees with respect to team communication overhead, and they are online-competitive with respect to load balancing. Experiments performed on collaboration networks among film actors and scientists, confirm that our algorithms are successful at balancing these conflicting requirements.This is the first paper that simultaneously addresses all these aspects. Previous work has either focused on minimizing coordination for a single task or balancing the workload neglecting coordination costs.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

The future of crowd work

TL;DR: This paper outlines a framework that will enable crowd work that is complex, collaborative, and sustainable, and lays out research challenges in twelve major areas: workflow, task assignment, hierarchy, real-time response, synchronous collaboration, quality control, crowds guiding AIs, AIs guiding crowds, platforms, job design, reputation, and motivation.
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The Future of Crowd Work

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors outline a framework that will enable crowd work that is complex, collaborative, and sustainable, and lay out research challenges in twelve major areas: workflow, task assignment, hierarchy, real-time response, synchronous collaboration, quality control, crowds guiding AIs, AIs guiding crowds, platforms, job design, reputation, and motivation.
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Task assignment optimization in knowledge-intensive crowdsourcing

TL;DR: This work formulates, for the first time, the problem of worker-to-task assignment in KI-C as an optimization problem by proposing efficient adaptive algorithms to solve it and by accounting for human factors, such as worker expertise, wage requirements, and availability inside the optimization process.
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Capacitated team formation problem on social networks

TL;DR: This work investigates how team formation problems are proven to be NP-hard and designs efficient approximate algorithms for finding near optimum teams with provable guarantees that achieve significant improvement in finding effective teams.
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Capacitated Team Formation Problem on Social Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how such teams can be formed on a social network and design efficient approximate algorithms for finding near optimum teams with provable guarantees, which achieve significant improvement in finding effective teams, as compared to naive strategies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Ronald H. Coase
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TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that a definition of a firm may be obtained which is not only realistic in that it corresponds to what is meant by a firm in the real world, but is tractable by two of the most powerful instruments of economic analysis developed by Marshall, the idea of the margin and that of substitution.
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TL;DR: Covering the basic techniques used in the latest research work, the author consolidates progress made so far, including some very recent and promising results, and conveys the beauty and excitement of work in the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amortized efficiency of list update and paging rules

TL;DR: This article shows that move-to-front is within a constant factor of optimum among a wide class of list maintenance rules, and analyzes the amortized complexity of LRU, showing that its efficiency differs from that of the off-line paging rule by a factor that depends on the size of fast memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Applying Parallel Computation Algorithms in the Design of Serial Algorithms

TL;DR: It is pointed out that analyses of parallelism in computational problems have practical implications even when multi-processor machines are not available, and a unified framework for cases like this is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Finding a team of experts in social networks

TL;DR: This work is the first work to consider the TEAM FORMATION problem in the presence of a social network of individuals and measures effectiveness using the communication cost incurred by the subgraph in G that only involves X'.
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