4.6 Article

The effect of economic incentives and cooperation messages on user participation in crowdsourced public transport technologies

Journal

TRANSPORTATION
Volume 50, Issue 5, Pages 1585-1612

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11116-022-10288-7

Keywords

Crowdsourcing app; Public transport; Transport data; Field experiment; Contribution

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Transport data is crucial for planning and operations. Crowdsourcing applications offer a non-traditional method for data collection, but depend on user participation. Economic incentives and cooperation messages have a positive effect on increasing user participation, but the effect of economic incentives decreases over time.
Transport data is crucial for transport planning and operations. Collecting high-quality data has long been challenging due to the difficulty of achieving adequate spatiotemporal coverage within a representative sample. The increasingly integrated use of Information and Communication technologies in transport systems offers an opportunity to collect data using non-traditional methods. Crowdsourcing applications are an example where a community of users shares information about their travel experience. However, crowdsourcing applications depend on a critical mass of users providing feedback. We conducted a large-scale field experiment to examine the effect of economic incentives (a lottery for free trips) and cooperation messages (asking users to help the community) to encourage users to share reports about bus stop conditions using a crowdsourcing app. We found that offering an economic incentive increased the participation rate almost three times compared to a control group, which did not receive any message. This positive effect lasted for several weeks but decreased over time, especially for users who had not made reports prior to the experiment. This incentive also increased the number of reports shared by users. Using a cooperation message, with or without the economic incentive, also increased the participation rate compared to the control group, but adding a cooperation message decreased the effect of a standalone economic incentive.

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