An in-depth Analysis of Occasional and Recurring Collaborations in Online Music Co-creation
This provides insights into collaboration dynamics in online creative communities, though it appears incremental as it applies existing pattern mining techniques to a specific dataset.
The paper analyzed factors influencing remixing in online music co-creation communities, finding that fresh/less mature songs are generally overdubbed more, while communication factors like messages/invitations only matter for recurring collaborations and author reputation/metadata tags only affect occasional collaborations.
The success of online creative communities depends on the will of participants to create and derive content in a collaborative environment. Despite their growing popularity, the factors that lead to remixing existing content in online creative communities are not entirely understood. In this paper, we focus on overdubbing, that is, a dyadic collaboration where one author mixes one new track with an audio recording previously uploaded by another. We study musicians who collaborate regularly, that is, frequently overdub each other's songs. Building on frequent pattern mining techniques, we develop an approach to seek instances of such recurring collaborations in the Songtree community. We identify 43 instances involving two or three members with a similar reputation in the community. Our findings highlight common and different remix factors in occasional and recurring collaborations. Specifically, fresh and less mature songs are generally overdubbed more; instead, exchanging messages and invitations to collaborate are significant factors only for songs generated through recurring collaborations whereas author reputation (ranking) and applying metadata tags to songs have a positive effect only in occasional collaborations.