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Crowdsourcing Synchronous Spectator Support: (go on, go on, you're the best) n-1

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 18:36 authored by Franco Curmi, Maria Ferrario, Jon Whittle, Florian Floyd Mueller
Many studies have shown that crowd-support, such as cheering during sport events, can have a positive impact on athletes' performance. However, up until recently this support was only possible if the supporters and the athletes were geographically co-located. Can cheering be done remotely and would this be effective? In this paper we investigate the effect and possibilities of live remote cheering on co-located athletes and online supporting crowds that have a weak social tie and no social tie with the athlete. We recruit 140 online spectators and 5 athletes for an ad-hoc 5km road race. Results indicate that crowds socially closer to the athletes are significantly more engaged in the support. The athletes were excited by live remote cheering from friendsourced spectators and cheering from unknown crowdsourced participants indicating that remote friends and outsourced spectators could be an important source of support.

History

Start page

757

End page

766

Total pages

10

Outlet

Proceedings of the 33rd Annual CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2015)

Name of conference

CHI 2015: Crossings: crossing boundaries, crossing disciplines and crossing nations.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery

Place published

New York, United States

Start date

2015-04-18

End date

2015-04-23

Language

English

Copyright

© Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM 2015

Former Identifier

2006053580

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-06-10