Topicality and social impact: Diverse messages but focused messengers

L Weng, F Menczer - arXiv preprint arXiv:1402.5443, 2014 - arxiv.org
arXiv preprint arXiv:1402.5443, 2014arxiv.org
Are users who comment on a variety of matters more likely to achieve high influence than
those who delve into one focused field? Do general Twitter hashtags, such as# lol, tend to
be more popular than novel ones, such as# instantlyinlove? Questions like these demand a
way to detect topics hidden behind messages associated with an individual or a hashtag,
and a gauge of similarity among these topics. Here we develop such an approach to identify
clusters of similar hashtags by detecting communities in the hashtag co-occurrence network …
Are users who comment on a variety of matters more likely to achieve high influence than those who delve into one focused field? Do general Twitter hashtags, such as #lol, tend to be more popular than novel ones, such as #instantlyinlove? Questions like these demand a way to detect topics hidden behind messages associated with an individual or a hashtag, and a gauge of similarity among these topics. Here we develop such an approach to identify clusters of similar hashtags by detecting communities in the hashtag co-occurrence network. Then the topical diversity of a user's interests is quantified by the entropy of her hashtags across different topic clusters. A similar measure is applied to hashtags, based on co-occurring tags. We find that high topical diversity of early adopters or co-occurring tags implies high future popularity of hashtags. In contrast, low diversity helps an individual accumulate social influence. In short, diverse messages and focused messengers are more likely to gain impact.
arxiv.org