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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

The Social-Network Illusion That Tricks Your Mind



Network scientists have discovered how social networks can create the illusion that something is common when it is actually rare.



One of the curious things about social networks is the way that some messages, pictures, or ideas can spread like wildfire while others that seem just as catchy or interesting barely register at all. The content itself cannot be the source of this difference. Instead, there must be some property of the network that changes to allow some ideas to spread but not others.

Today, we get an insight into why this happens thanks to the work of Kristina Lerman and pals at the University of Southern California. These people have discovered an extraordinary illusion associated with social networks which can play tricks on the mind and explain everything from why some ideas become popular quickly to how risky or antisocial behavior can spread so easily.

Network scientists have known about the paradoxical nature of social networks for some time. The most famous example is the friendship paradox: on average your friends will have more friends than you do.

Story here

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Being on social media makes me want to be unsocial. If you really want to get a grasp on where the human species is headed, scroll through a social media feed and you'll see why Genocide was so popular. Sometimes I think we are way past due for a plague or mass extinction event.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I think social media is way too much 'Look at me!' crap. Its almost a license to let your Common Sense filter work. People give out waaay too much personal information out because they think only their friends will see it. Nuh Uh snowflake - EVERYBODY can see it, information that people will pay to find out.