@article {499, title = {The Material and Social Dynamics of Motivation: Contributions to Open Source Language Technology Development}, journal = {Science Studies}, number = {2}, year = {2008}, note = {"I conducted a two-phased qualitative analysis on multiple data (thematic phone-inter- views, notes from OpenOffice.org conference 2004 meetings, historical documents, mailing list discussions, homepages, Google, blogs, real-time video and audio presentations from OpenOffice.org conference 2005)."}, abstract = {Volunteer motivation has been a central theme in Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS) literature. This research has been largely dominated by economists who rely in their surveys on the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic motivations and the "hacker ethic" for profit juxtaposition. The paper argues that survey-based analytical frameworks and research designs have led to a focus on some motivational attributions at the expense of others. It then presents a case study that explores dynamic, non individualistic and content-sensitive aspects of motivations. The approach is based on socio-cultural psychology and the author{\textquoteright}s observations of a hybrid firm-community FLOSS project, OpenOffice.org. Instead of separating intrinsic motivations from extrinsic ones, it is argued that complex and changing patterns of motivations are tied to changing objects and personal histories prior to and during participation. The boundary between work and hobby in an individual{\textquoteright}s participation path is blurred and shifting.}, keywords = {contributions, developers, email, email archives, mailing list, MOTIVATION, openoffice, openoffice.org, secondary data, Volunteers}, attachments = {https://flosshub.org/sites/flosshub.org/files/Freeman.pdf}, author = {Stephanie Freeman} }