Gifts are important instruments for forming bonds in interpersonal relationships. Our study analyzes the phenomenon of gift contagion in online groups. Gift contagion encourages social bonds by prompting further gifts; it may also promote group interaction and solidarity. Using data on 36 million online red packet gifts on a large social site in East Asia, we leverage a natural experimental design to identify the social contagion of gift giving in online groups. Our natural experiment is enabled by the randomization of the gift amount allocation algorithm on the platform, which addresses the common challenge of causal identifications in observational data. Our study provides evidence of gift contagion: on average, receiving one additional d...
Acknowledgements: JGG is supported by the Spanish MINECO through the Ramón y Cajal program and Proje...
PurposeThis research paper aims to understand how givers characterise and manage their gift giving n...
Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reciprocated...
© 2018 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Giving gifts is a fundamental part of human relatio...
Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reciprocated...
The recent availability of massive amounts of networked data generated by email, instant messaging, ...
This dissertation is composed of a literature review, Chapter 1, an in-depth analysis of data used i...
Every day, millions of people write online restaurant reviews, leave product ratings, provide answer...
listed in reverse alphabetical order. The authors thank Don Lehmann, Christophe Van den Bulte, Dunca...
Social networking sites have been growing in popularity over the last decade or so, and there have b...
Previous research has shown that reciprocity can be contagious when there is no option to repay the ...
Why do certain cultural items capture persistent collective interest while others languish? This res...
<div><p>Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reci...
Social closeness and popularity are key ingredients that shape the emergence and evolution of social...
We conducted online field experiments in large real-world social networks in order to decompose pros...
Acknowledgements: JGG is supported by the Spanish MINECO through the Ramón y Cajal program and Proje...
PurposeThis research paper aims to understand how givers characterise and manage their gift giving n...
Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reciprocated...
© 2018 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Giving gifts is a fundamental part of human relatio...
Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reciprocated...
The recent availability of massive amounts of networked data generated by email, instant messaging, ...
This dissertation is composed of a literature review, Chapter 1, an in-depth analysis of data used i...
Every day, millions of people write online restaurant reviews, leave product ratings, provide answer...
listed in reverse alphabetical order. The authors thank Don Lehmann, Christophe Van den Bulte, Dunca...
Social networking sites have been growing in popularity over the last decade or so, and there have b...
Previous research has shown that reciprocity can be contagious when there is no option to repay the ...
Why do certain cultural items capture persistent collective interest while others languish? This res...
<div><p>Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reci...
Social closeness and popularity are key ingredients that shape the emergence and evolution of social...
We conducted online field experiments in large real-world social networks in order to decompose pros...
Acknowledgements: JGG is supported by the Spanish MINECO through the Ramón y Cajal program and Proje...
PurposeThis research paper aims to understand how givers characterise and manage their gift giving n...
Why do people help strangers when there is a low probability that help will be directly reciprocated...