Title
Influence and correlation in social networks
Abstract
In many online social systems, social ties between users play an important role in dictating their behavior. One of the ways this can happen is through social influence, the phenomenon that the actions of a user can induce his/her friends to behave in a similar way. In systems where social influence exists, ideas, modes of behavior, or new technologies can diffuse through the network like an epidemic. Therefore, identifying and understanding social influence is of tremendous interest from both analysis and design points of view. This is a difficult task in general, since there are factors such as homophily or unobserved confounding variables that can induce statistical correlation between the actions of friends in a social network. Distinguishing influence from these is essentially the problem of distinguishing correlation from causality, a notoriously hard statistical problem. In this paper we study this problem systematically. We define fairly general models that replicate the aforementioned sources of social correlation. We then propose two simple tests that can identify influence as a source of social correlation when the time series of user actions is available. We give a theoretical justification of one of the tests by proving that with high probability it succeeds in ruling out influence in a rather general model of social correlation. We also simulate our tests on a number of examples designed by randomly generating actions of nodes on a real social network (from Flickr) according to one of several models. Simulation results confirm that our test performs well on these data. Finally, we apply them to real tagging data on Flickr, exhibiting that while there is significant social correlation in tagging behavior on this system, this correlation cannot be attributed to social influence.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1145/1401890.1401897
KDD
Keywords
Field
DocType
general model,social network,significant social correlation,social influence,social tie,real social network,online social system,distinguishing influence,social correlation,distinguishing correlation,correlation,social networks,social ties,social system
Dynamic network analysis,Data mining,Social statistics,Social network,Computer science,Homophily,Social influence,Artificial intelligence,Social system,Social heuristics,Interpersonal ties,Machine learning
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
331
20.96
3
Authors
3
Search Limit
100331
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Aris Anagnostopoulos1105467.08
Ravi Kumar2139321642.48
Mohammad Mahdian32689226.62