Local Interactions and the Emergence of a Twitter Small-World Network
Eugene Ch'ng

TL;DR
This paper investigates how local interactions in Twitter communities lead to the emergence of small-world network properties, emphasizing the role of community arguments and centralities in maintaining network cohesion.
Contribution
It formally defines ego centralities that sustain small-world networks in online social systems, highlighting their role in the emergence and cohesion of Twitter communities.
Findings
Twitter community arguments maintain small-world structure
Local interactions lead to global network emergence
High centrality nodes influence network cohesion
Abstract
The small-world phenomenon is found in many self-organising systems. Systems configured in small-world networks spread information more easily than in random or regular lattice-type networks. Whilst it is a known fact that small-world networks have short average path length and high clustering coefficient in self-organising systems, the ego centralities that maintain the cohesiveness of small-world network have not been formally defined. Here we show that instantaneous events such as the release of news items via Twitter, coupled with active community arguments related to the news item form a particular type of small-world network. Analysis of the centralities in the network reveals that community arguments maintain the small-world network whilst actively maintaining the cohesiveness and boundary of the group. The results demonstrate how an active Twitter community unconsciously forms a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Social Media and Politics
