Emergence of online communities: Empirical evidence and theory
Yaniv Dover, Guy Kelman

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamics of online communities, revealing a universal relationship between community size and activity, characterized by distinct regimes and a phase transition that marks the emergence of sustainable, highly active communities.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of a universal activity-size relationship and introduces a theoretical explanation based on the branching property of interactions.
Findings
Identifies three activity regimes in online communities.
Discovers a sharp phase transition at a critical community size.
Shows activity stabilizes at a high level beyond a larger size.
Abstract
Online communities, which have become an integral part of the day-to-day life of people and organizations, exhibit much diversity in both size and activity level; some communities grow to a massive scale and thrive, whereas others remain small, and even wither. In spite of the important role of these proliferating communities, there is limited empirical evidence that identifies the dominant factors underlying their dynamics. Using data collected from seven large online platforms, we observe a universal relationship between online community size and its activity: First, three distinct activity regimes exist, one of low-activity and two of high-activity. Further, we find a sharp activity phase transition at a critical community size that marks the shift between the first and the second regime. Essentially, it is around this critical size that sustainable interactive communities emerge.…
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