论文标题
社交互动会影响发现过程
Social interactions affect discovery processes
论文作者
论文摘要
我们的熟人网络决定了我们如何接触思想,产品或文化艺术品(书籍,音乐,电影等)。尽管这一原则是我们常识的一部分,但对我们的同龄人影响我们的发现过程和对新事物的经验的特定途径知之甚少。在这里,我们通过调查包含来自在线音乐平台\ emph {last.fm}的大型,社交连接的用户样本的数据集来填补这一空白。我们证明,用户表现出新歌曲和艺术家的高度异质发现率,并且他们的社交社区显着影响其行为。更多的探索用户倾向于与同行互动更容易探索新内容。我们在建模方案中捕获了这种现象学,其中用户是由随机的步行者代表的,探索歌曲或艺术家的图表,并通过他们的社交链接相互互动。即使是从统一的代理人(个人之间没有自然差异)开始,我们的模型也预测了强烈的异质探索模式的出现,用户根据他们的音乐品味和探索倾向进行了聚集。我们认为我们的方法可以为集体发现过程的定量方法铺平道路。
Our network of acquaintances determines how we get exposed to ideas, products, or cultural artworks (books, music, movies, etc.). Though this principle is part of our common sense, little is known about the specific pathways through which our peers influence our discovery processes and our experience of the new. Here, we fill this gap by investigating a data set containing the whole listening histories of a large, socially connected sample of users from the online music platform \emph{Last.fm}. We demonstrate that users exhibit highly heterogeneous discovery rates of new songs and artists and that their social neighborhood significantly influences their behavior. More explorative users tend to interact with peers more prone to explore new content. We capture this phenomenology in a modeling scheme where users are represented by random walkers exploring a graph of songs or artists and interacting with each other through their social links. Even starting from a uniform population of agents (no natural differences among the individuals), our model predicts the emergence of strong heterogeneous exploration patterns, with users clustered according to their musical tastes and propensity to explore. We contend our approach can pave the way to a quantitative approach to collective discovery processes.