When I read the
headline, Best Connected Individuals Are Not the Most Influential Spreaders in
Social Networks, I thought there might be something interesting here. Maksim
Kitsak at Boston University and a team of researchers are looking at this issue
and recently published a paper, Identifying influential spreaders in complex
networks, that was documented in Technology Review. I am still reflecting on this.
The article
reports that the importance of hubs may have been overstated and quotes Kitsak
and his colleagues. "In contrast to common belief, the most influential
spreaders in a social network do not correspond to the best connected people or
to the most central people.”
It goes on to
report that by contrast, "a less connected person who is strategically
placed in the core of the network will have a significant effect that leads to
dissemination through a large fraction of the population." In fact it is
being at the core of networks with the most connections that makes you the most
influential. So, if I understand
this correctly, it is being near the core and being near the best connected
individuals that makes you the most influential as long as your group is also the
most connected. Sounds a bit
subtle.
Perhaps the most
influential generate the ideas and then those near them who are best connected
or their group that is best connected get the ideas out. Or perhaps it is hanging out with well
connected people allows you to get your ideas out. So I should remain in
contact with the well connected writers on this group blog but we need to spend
more time together as the authors conclude, “When multiple spreaders are
considered simultaneously, the distance between them becomes the crucial
parameter that determines the extend of the spreading.” Perhaps you need a
generator and a spreader but they did not mention this. They do say that their
analysis “provides a plausible route for an optimal design of efficient
dissemination strategies.”
The BU team
tested their idea on a diverse set of networks including the 5.5 million
members of LiveJournal.com, the network of email contacts in the computer
science department at University College London and the network of actors who
have co-starred in adult films as defined by the Internet movie database. The article did cover the method of connection
for the latter group. I wonder what the differences and similarities were
between these somewhat diverse groups.
What has been
your experience here? Are you a hub, a genrator, or a spreader? Can you be
both?
This is a very interesting insight. In the social media field, connection is synonymous to power. But as the face of social media has continued to change, there has been a paradigm shift in this complicated web. Nowadays, we look at the influencers as people who have both the connection and the knowledge to share.
Posted by: Lyndia Blue | March 12, 2013 at 02:14 PM