%0 Conference Paper %B The 10th China Summer Workshop on Information Management (CSWIM 2016) %D 2016 %T Helping Senior Participants Acquire the Right Type of Social Support in Online Communities %A Wang,Changyu %A Zhu,Bin %A Zuo,Meiyun %K BIS %K Business Analytics %X Senior citizens could greatly be benefited from the social support received from a community(Choi et al. 2014; Goswami et al. 2010). Social support denotes to the interaction/communication with others, verbal or nonverbal, reducing the uncertainty or enhancing the self-perception of in control of one’s own life (Albrecht and Adelman 1987). All participants of online communities are motivated by their desire of seeking social support. And such support occurs when community members form relational links among them and have interactions that intend to help (Heaney and Israel 2002). A network member can receive/send different types of social supports from/to others. Informational support transmits information and provides guidance related to the task/question a community member has (Krause 1986); emotional support expresses understanding, encouragement, empathy affection, affirming, validation, sympathy, caring and concern (House 1981; Wang et al. 2014); companionship or network support gives the recipient a sense of belonging (Keating 2013; Wang et al. 2014); and appraisal support enhances the self-evaluation of the recipient (House 1981). Studies have shown that people are usually motivated by their desire of seeking one or more types of social supports to participate in an online community (Goswami et al. 2010; Kanayama 2003; Pfeil 2007; Pfeil and Zaphiris 2009; Wright 2000; Xie 2008). And such social support can only be acquired during the interaction with others. For senior citizens, even though they can be greatly benefited from the social support received through participation, the obstacles they need to overcome in order to feel engaged could be larger than that of younger people (Charness and Boot 2009; Lee et al. 2011), especially when they come to the community for the first time. They could be easily overwhelmed by the content that has been generated by other existing members, finding it difficult to identify an appropriate member to initiate a meaningful interaction. It therefore is critical for an online community system to help senior participants identify other existing members who are more likely to supply the type of support they are seeking. While many previous studies have uncovered the variety factors, contextual (Pfeil and Zaphiris 2009; Wang et al. 2015; Xie 2008) or individual (Wang et al. 2014, 2015, 2012; Wright 1999), that impact the degree to which a senior citizen receives social support needed from an online community, it remains unclear what the characteristics of existing community members who are more likely to provide a new comer the kind of support, informational, emotional, companionship, or appraisal are. And the answer to this question may have significant academic and practical implications. This study thus proposes to fulfil the gap by utilizing data collected from a senior community website to investigate the links between the characteristics of existing senior members and the amount and the type of support they provided to new comers. %B The 10th China Summer Workshop on Information Management (CSWIM 2016) %8 2016 %G eng %2 b %4 127142539264 %$ 127142539264 %0 Journal Article %J Akadémiai Kiadó and Springer Science+Business Media %D 2014 %T The Hl-index: Improvement of H-index Based on Quality of Citing Papers %A Zai,Li %A Yan,Xiangbin %A Zhu,Bin %K BIS %K Business Analytics %X This paper proposes hl-index as an improvement of the h-index, a popular measurement for the research quality of academic researchers. Although the h-index integrates the number of publications and the academic impact of each publication to evaluate the productivity of a researcher, it assumes that all papers that cite an academic article contribute equally to the academic impact of this article. This assumption, of course, could not be true in most times. The citation from a well-cited paper certainly brings more attention to the article than the citation from a paper that people do not pay attention to. It therefore becomes important to integrate the impact of papers that cite a researcher’s work into the evaluation of the productivity of the researcher. Constructing a citation network among academic papers, this paper therefore proposes hl-index that integrating the h-index with the concept of lobby index, a measures that has been used to evaluate the impact of a node in a complex network based on the impact of other nodes that the focal node has direct link with. This paper also explores the characteristics of the proposed hl-index by comparing it with citations, h-index and its variant g-index. %B Akadémiai Kiadó and Springer Science+Business Media %V 98 %P 1021-1031 %8 2014 %G eng %N 2 %2 a %4 69565954048 %$ 69565954048 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology %D 2003 %T HelpfulMed: Intelligent Searching for Medical Information over the Internet %A Chen,H. %A Lally,A.M. %A Zhu,Bin %A Chau,M. %K BIS %K Business Analytics %B Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology %V 54 %P 683-694 %8 2003 %G eng %N 7 %2 a %4 39438098433 %$ 39438098433