Distinguishing Topical and Social Groups Based on Common Identity and Bond Theory
Przemyslaw A. Grabowicz, Luca Maria Aiello, V\'ictor M. Egu\'iluz,, Alejandro Jaimes

TL;DR
This paper applies social identity and bond theory to classify social media groups as topical or social, using features derived from Flickr data and community detection, achieving high prediction accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel feature set based on social theory to automatically classify social media groups into topical or social categories.
Findings
High accuracy in predicting group types
Effective use of community detection for group analysis
Validation of social theory in online group classification
Abstract
Social groups play a crucial role in social media platforms because they form the basis for user participation and engagement. Groups are created explicitly by members of the community, but also form organically as members interact. Due to their importance, they have been studied widely (e.g., community detection, evolution, activity, etc.). One of the key questions for understanding how such groups evolve is whether there are different types of groups and how they differ. In Sociology, theories have been proposed to help explain how such groups form. In particular, the common identity and common bond theory states that people join groups based on identity (i.e., interest in the topics discussed) or bond attachment (i.e., social relationships). The theory has been applied qualitatively to small groups to classify them as either topical or social. We use the identity and bond theory to…
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