Characterizing response quantity on academic social Q&A sites: a multidiscipline comparison of linguistic characteristics of questions

Lei Li, Anrunze Li, Xue Song, Xinran Li, Kun Huang, Edwin Mouda Ye

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: As academic social Q&A networking websites become more popular, scholars are increasingly using them to meet their information needs by asking academic questions. However, compared with other types of social media, scholars are less active on these sites, resulting in a lower response quantity for some questions. This paper explores the factors that help explain how to ask questions that generate more responses and examines the impact of different disciplines on response quantity. Design/methodology/approach: The study examines 1,968 questions in five disciplines on the academic social Q&A platform ResearchGate Q&A and explores how the linguistic characteristics of these questions affect the number of responses. It uses a range of methods to statistically analyze the relationship between these linguistic characteristics and the number of responses, and conducts comparisons between disciplines. Findings: The findings indicate that some linguistic characteristics, such as sadness, positive emotion and second-person pronouns, have a positive effect on response quantity; conversely, a high level of function words and first-person pronouns has a negative effect. However, the impacts of these linguistic characteristics vary across disciplines. Originality/value: This study provides support for academic social Q&A platforms to assist scholars in asking richer questions that are likely to generate more answers across disciplines, thereby promoting improved academic communication among scholars.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)921-938
Number of pages18
JournalLibrary Hi Tech
Volume41
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 Jul 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Academic questions
  • Academic social Q&A
  • Information communication
  • Information seeking
  • Linguistic characteristics
  • Response quantity

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