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Beyond network centrality: individual-level behavioral traits for predicting information superspreaders in social media.

Fang ZhouLinyuan LüJianguo LiuManuel Sebastian Mariani
Published in: National science review (2024)
Understanding the heterogeneous role of individuals in large-scale information spreading is essential to manage online behavior as well as its potential offline consequences. To this end, most existing studies from diverse research domains focus on the disproportionate role played by highly connected 'hub' individuals. However, we demonstrate here that information superspreaders in online social media are best understood and predicted by simultaneously considering two individual-level behavioral traits: influence and susceptibility. Specifically, we derive a nonlinear network-based algorithm to quantify individuals' influence and susceptibility from multiple spreading event data. By applying the algorithm to large-scale data from Twitter and Weibo, we demonstrate that individuals' estimated influence and susceptibility scores enable predictions of future superspreaders above and beyond network centrality, and reveal new insights into the network positions of the superspreaders.
Keyphrases
  • social media
  • health information
  • genome wide
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • electronic health record
  • big data
  • network analysis
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • neural network
  • case control