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A meritocratic network formation model for the rise of social media influencers

Nicolò Pagan, Wenjun Mei, Cheng Li, Florian Dörfler

2021Nature Communications17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many of today's most used online social networks such as Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, or Twitch are based on User-Generated Content (UGC). Thanks to the integrated search engines, users of these platforms can discover and follow their peers based on the UGC and its quality. Here, we propose an untouched meritocratic approach for directed network formation, inspired by empirical evidence on Twitter data: actors continuously search for the best UGC provider. We theoretically and numerically analyze the network equilibria properties under different meeting probabilities: while featuring common real-world networks properties, e.g., scaling law or small-world effect, our model predicts that the expected in-degree follows a Zipf's law with respect to the quality ranking. Notably, the results are robust against the effect of recommendation systems mimicked through preferential attachment based meeting approaches. Our theoretical results are empirically validated against large data sets collected from Twitch, a fast-growing platform for online gamers.

Topics & Concepts

MeritocracyZipf's lawInfluencer marketingComputer scienceSocial mediaRanking (information retrieval)Social network (sociolinguistics)Quality (philosophy)Preferential attachmentData scienceWorld Wide WebComplex networkInformation retrievalMathematicsBusinessStatisticsEconomicsMarketingPhilosophyMarket economyEpistemologyMarketing managementRelationship marketingComplex Network Analysis TechniquesOpinion Dynamics and Social InfluenceGame Theory and Applications
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