Timescales of Massive Human Entrainment
Riccardo Fusaroli, Marcus Perlman, Alan Mislove, Alexandra Paxton,, Teenie Matlock, Rick Dale

TL;DR
This study analyzes how collective human attention on social media aligns with the real-time dynamics of political debates, revealing rapid, scale-specific entrainment patterns and decay of attention over time.
Contribution
It extends entrainment concepts to human collective attention, providing detailed temporal analysis of social media responses during a major political event.
Findings
Mentions of candidates increase within 5-10 seconds after debate moments.
Attention peaks around one minute after salient events.
Public attention gradually decays throughout the debates.
Abstract
The past two decades have seen an upsurge of interest in the collective behaviors of complex systems composed of many agents entrained to each other and to external events. In this paper, we extend concepts of entrainment to the dynamics of human collective attention. We conducted a detailed investigation of the unfolding of human entrainment - as expressed by the content and patterns of hundreds of thousands of messages on Twitter - during the 2012 US presidential debates. By time locking these data sources, we quantify the impact of the unfolding debate on human attention. We show that collective social behavior covaries second-by-second to the interactional dynamics of the debates: A candidate speaking induces rapid increases in mentions of his name on social media and decreases in mentions of the other candidate. Moreover, interruptions by an interlocutor increase the attention…
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