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Evolving activity cascades on socio-technological networks

Author

Listed:
  • Javier Borge-Holthoefer

    (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
    Universidad de Zaragoza)

  • Pablo Piedrahita

    (Universidad de Zaragoza)

  • Alex Arenas

    (Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    IPHES, Institut Catala de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social)

Abstract

Networks are the substrate on which social contagion propagates, from the growth of social movements to the adoption of innovations. In the complex networks community, it took some time to realize the difference between simple propagation—e.g., the spread of disease—in which a single active node is sufficient to trigger the activation of its neighbors, and complex contagion, in which node activation requires simultaneous exposure to multiple active neighbors. Rooted in the social science literature, complex contagion has settled as the driving mechanism for behavior cascades on social networks. However, our access to digital traces of social interaction reveals, besides and beyond complex contagion, bursty activity patterns, repeated agent activation, and occasionally a form of synchronization under the form of trending topics and hypes. Thus, the threshold model—the paramount example in the tradition of complex contagion—needs to shift from a standpoint in which agents become irreversibly active (“one-off” events), to another in which agents continuously change their state and whose activity shows oscillating patterns. Here, we review a mechanistic model that, within the logic of complex contagion, accounts as well for the temporal evolution of behavior cascades. In it, agents follow the dynamics of integrate-and-fire oscillators. The affordances of the model—and of some recent variations on it—will open a discussion and outlook for future developments.

Suggested Citation

  • Javier Borge-Holthoefer & Pablo Piedrahita & Alex Arenas, 2018. "Evolving activity cascades on socio-technological networks," Journal of Computational Social Science, Springer, vol. 1(1), pages 67-79, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:jcsosc:v:1:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1007_s42001-017-0012-7
    DOI: 10.1007/s42001-017-0012-7
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    Cited by:

    1. Bodaghi, Amirhosein & Goliaei, Sama & Salehi, Mostafa, 2019. "The number of followings as an influential factor in rumor spreading," Applied Mathematics and Computation, Elsevier, vol. 357(C), pages 167-184.
    2. Juan Miguel Rodriguez-Lopez & Meike Schickhoff & Shubhankar Sengupta & Jürgen Scheffran, 2021. "Technological and social networks of a pastoralist artificial society: agent-based modeling of mobility patterns," Journal of Computational Social Science, Springer, vol. 4(2), pages 681-707, November.

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