The process of diffusing viral marketing campaigns through social networks can be modeled under concepts of mathematical epidemiology. Based on a Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) epidemiological model, the benefits of optimal control theory on the diffusion of a real viral advertisement are studied. Two optimal control strategies that could help marketers to maximize the spread of information and minimize the costs associated to it in optimal time windows are analyzed and compared. The uniqueness of optimality system is proved. Numerical simulations show that high investment costs in publicity strategies do not imply high overall levels of information diffusion. This paper contributes to the current literature by studying a viral market...
We study the optimal control problem of allocating campaigning resources over the campaign duration ...
In epidemiology, an epidemic is defined as the spread of an infectious disease to a large number of ...
We model information dissemination as a susceptible-infected epidemic process and formulate a proble...
The process of diffusing viral marketing campaigns through social networks can be modeled under conc...
The complexity of optimal control problems requires the use of numerical methods to compute control ...
We model the spread of information in a homogeneously mixed population using the Maki Thompson rumor...
We study the optimal control problem of maximizing the spread of an information epidemic on a social...
We survey the recent literature on theoretical models of diffusion in social networks and the applic...
Viral marketing has been one of the main marketing modes. However, theoretical study of viral market...
Standard Susceptible-Infected-Susceptible (SIS) epidemic models assume that a message spreads from t...
We consider the problem of devising optimal timing of on-line campaigns for diffusion of product or ...
Information spreading in a population can be modeled as an epidemic. Campaigners (e.g., election cam...
Viral marketing has been one of the main marketing modes. However, theoretical study of viral market...
Abstract: Online advertisement through social media is studied in this paper. We describe the combi...
In this paper, we consider a new discrete-time model that describes the spread of information by sha...
We study the optimal control problem of allocating campaigning resources over the campaign duration ...
In epidemiology, an epidemic is defined as the spread of an infectious disease to a large number of ...
We model information dissemination as a susceptible-infected epidemic process and formulate a proble...
The process of diffusing viral marketing campaigns through social networks can be modeled under conc...
The complexity of optimal control problems requires the use of numerical methods to compute control ...
We model the spread of information in a homogeneously mixed population using the Maki Thompson rumor...
We study the optimal control problem of maximizing the spread of an information epidemic on a social...
We survey the recent literature on theoretical models of diffusion in social networks and the applic...
Viral marketing has been one of the main marketing modes. However, theoretical study of viral market...
Standard Susceptible-Infected-Susceptible (SIS) epidemic models assume that a message spreads from t...
We consider the problem of devising optimal timing of on-line campaigns for diffusion of product or ...
Information spreading in a population can be modeled as an epidemic. Campaigners (e.g., election cam...
Viral marketing has been one of the main marketing modes. However, theoretical study of viral market...
Abstract: Online advertisement through social media is studied in this paper. We describe the combi...
In this paper, we consider a new discrete-time model that describes the spread of information by sha...
We study the optimal control problem of allocating campaigning resources over the campaign duration ...
In epidemiology, an epidemic is defined as the spread of an infectious disease to a large number of ...
We model information dissemination as a susceptible-infected epidemic process and formulate a proble...