Northwestern Events Calendar

Nov
16
2016

WED@NICO SEMINAR: Sabine Brunswicker, Purdue University "Innovation on Open Digital Platforms"

When: Wednesday, November 16, 2016
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM CT

Where: Chambers Hall, Lower Level, 600 Foster St, Evanston, IL 60208 map it

Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students

Contact: Yasmeen Khan   (847) 491-2527

Group: Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO)

Category: Academic

Description:

Innovation on Open Digital Platforms: Simulating the Effect of Developer Strategies on the Interplay Between Platform Complexity and Performance

Speaker:

Sabine Brunswicker - Associate Professor and Director, Research Center for Open Digital Innovation, Purdue University.

Talk Abstract:

Innovation and production has become increasingly open and distributed phenomenon. Over the last year, platforms have established themselves as the primary model for organizing the development and distribution of digital “apps”. Google Android, iPhone iOS, or Salesforce.com are just a few of many examples. The apps offered on such platforms range from truly novel offerings along with apps presenting incremental advantages over previous versions. This talk presents the results of a recently completed study that is focused on how the platform design, and in particular the complexity of the platform’s architecture shapes the performance of different developer behaviors, that are either focused on more incremental or radical design choices. Drawing upon the literature on search and aspirations, the study develops an NK simulation model to represents the developers’ iterative app development process, during which the developer pays attention to information on the performance of others' and their own prior app performance. The results from this simulation unpack the effect of different developer strategies on the interplay between platform complexity and platform performance. It discovers several unexpected relationships, such as that platforms with upward striving developers with high aspiration points perform worse under conditions of highly complex platforms. The study results contribute to platform design theory by offering a set of propositions about the relationship between platform complexity, developer profiles, and platform performance. The findings also allow platform owners to revisit their current platform design in order to improve their platform’s performance. At the end of the talk, I will provide an overview of ongoing empirical quasi-experiments on open data application development intended to advance our understanding of how platform design can support application developer in re-use to increase developer and platform performance.

Live Stream:

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