Twitter讨论组中的平等和社会流动性

Katherine Ellis, M. Goldszmidt, Gert R. G. Lanckriet, Nina Mishra, Omer Reingold
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引用次数: 10

摘要

在线群组,包括聊天群组和论坛,正在成为收集和交换信息的重要途径,从设备故障排除到分享经验,再到寻找医疗信息和建议。因此,有关这些群体的健康和稳定的问题是工业界和学术界特别感兴趣的问题。在本文中,我们进行了一项大规模的研究,其目标首先是描述这些群体参与者之间互动的基本方面,其次是描述这些互动的性质如何与群体的健康相关。具体来说,我们专注于Twitter讨论组(tdg),这是一种自组织的小组,通过商定一个标签、日期和时间在Twitter上聚会。这些团体进行重复的实时会议,在Twitter上是一种正在兴起的现象。根据Twitter上的@mention惯例,我们从社会平等和参与者之间注意力交换的流动性的角度来研究这些群体中的互动。我们通过测量参与者的保留率和会议次数随时间的变化来估计一个群体的健康状况。我们发现,社会平等和流动性是相关的,而平等和流动性与一个群体的健康有关。事实上,平等和流动性可以预测一个群体的健康状况,就像用来预测其他在线群体健康状况的一些先前特征一样。我们的发现是基于对2012年6月至2013年6月期间超过2000个讨论组的10万次会议的研究。这些发现不仅与有兴趣维持这些群体的利益相关者有关,而且与有兴趣了解在线讨论参与者行为的研究人员和学者有关。我们还发现,在现实世界国家中,经济流动性与平等及健康指标之间关系的研究结果令人震惊,发人深省。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Equality and Social Mobility in Twitter Discussion Groups
Online groups, including chat groups and forums, are becoming important avenues for gathering and exchanging information ranging from troubleshooting devices, to sharing experiences, to finding medical information and advice. Thus, issues about the health and stability of these groups are of particular interest to both industry and academia. In this paper we conduct a large scale study with the objectives of first, characterizing essential aspects of the interactions between the participants of such groups and second, characterizing how the nature of these interactions relate to the health of the groups. Specifically, we concentrate on Twitter Discussion Groups (TDGs), self-organized groups that meet on Twitter by agreeing on a hashtag, date and time. These groups have repeated, real-time meetings and are a rising phenomenon on Twitter. We examine the interactions in these groups in terms of the social equality and mobility of the exchange of attention between participants, according to the @mention convention on Twitter. We estimate the health of a group by measuring the retention rate of participants and the change in the number of meetings over time. We find that social equality and mobility are correlated, and that equality and mobility are related to a group's health. In fact, equality and mobility are as predictive of a group's health as some prior characteristics used to predict health of other online groups. Our findings are based on studying 100 thousand sessions of over two thousand discussion groups over the period of June 2012 to June 2013. These finding are not only relevant to stakeholders interested in maintaining these groups, but to researchers and academics interested in understanding the behavior of participants in online discussions. We also find the parallel with findings on the relationship between economic mobility and equality and health indicators in real-world nations striking and thought-provoking.
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