A Human Behavioral Baseline for Collective Governance in Software Projects
Noori, Mobina, Chakraborti, Mahasweta, Zhang, Amy X, Frey, Seth
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
We study how open source communities describe participation and control through version controlled governance documents. Using a corpus of 710 projects with paired snapshots, we parse text into actors, rules, actions, and objects, then group them and measure change with entropy for evenness, richness for diversity, and Jensen Shannon divergence for drift. Projects define more roles and more actions over time, and these are distributed more evenly, while the composition of rules remains stable. These findings indicate that governance grows by expanding and balancing categories of participation without major shifts in prescriptive force. The analysis provides a reproducible baseline for evaluating whether future AI mediated workflows concentrate or redistribute authority.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-18-2025
- Country:
- North America > United States
- California > Yolo County
- Davis (0.14)
- Connecticut > New Haven County
- New Haven (0.04)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- Massachusetts > Middlesex County
- Cambridge (0.04)
- Washington > King County
- Seattle (0.04)
- California > Yolo County
- South America > Chile
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Industry:
- Law (0.46)
- Social Sector (0.46)
- Technology: