Structural diversity in social contagion
Menlo School · Meta (United States) · +1 more institution
Abstract
The concept of contagion has steadily expanded from its original grounding in epidemic disease to describe a vast array of processes that spread across networks, notably social phenomena such as fads, political opinions, the adoption of new technologies, and financial decisions. Traditional models of social contagion have been based on physical analogies with biological contagion, in which the probability that an individual is affected by the contagion grows monotonically with the size of his or her "contact neighborhood"--the number of affected individuals with whom he or she is in contact. Whereas this contact neighborhood hypothesis has formed the underpinning of essentially all current models, it has been…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.21
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Emotional contagion
- Identification (biology)
- Diversity (politics)
- Process (computing)
- Social network (sociolinguistics)
- Social media
- Econometrics
- Economic geography
- Good health and well-being