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A Geometric Representation of Collective Attention Flows

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  • Peiteng Shi
  • Xiaohan Huang
  • Jun Wang
  • Jiang Zhang
  • Su Deng
  • Yahui Wu

Abstract

With the fast development of Internet and WWW, “information overload” has become an overwhelming problem, and collective attention of users will play a more important role nowadays. As a result, knowing how collective attention distributes and flows among different websites is the first step to understand the underlying dynamics of attention on WWW. In this paper, we propose a method to embed a large number of web sites into a high dimensional Euclidean space according to the novel concept of flow distance, which both considers connection topology between sites and collective click behaviors of users. With this geometric representation, we visualize the attention flow in the data set of Indiana university clickstream over one day. It turns out that all the websites can be embedded into a 20 dimensional ball, in which, close sites are always visited by users sequentially. The distributions of websites, attention flows, and dissipations can be divided into three spherical crowns (core, interim, and periphery). 20% popular sites (Google.com, Myspace.com, Facebook.com, etc.) attracting 75% attention flows with only 55% dissipations (log off users) locate in the central layer with the radius 4.1. While 60% sites attracting only about 22% traffics with almost 38% dissipations locate in the middle area with radius between 4.1 and 6.3. Other 20% sites are far from the central area. All the cumulative distributions of variables can be well fitted by “S”-shaped curves. And the patterns are stable across different periods. Thus, the overall distribution and the dynamics of collective attention on websites can be well exhibited by this geometric representation.

Suggested Citation

  • Peiteng Shi & Xiaohan Huang & Jun Wang & Jiang Zhang & Su Deng & Yahui Wu, 2015. "A Geometric Representation of Collective Attention Flows," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(9), pages 1-21, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0136243
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136243
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