Abstract Even though people in our contemporary, technological society are depending on communication, our understanding of the underlying laws of human communicational behavior continues to be poorly understood. Here we investigate the communication patterns in two social Internet communities in search of statistical laws in human interaction activity. This research reveals that human communication networks dynamically follow scaling laws that may also explain the observed trends in economic growth. Specifically, we identify a generalized version of Gibrat's law of social activity expressed as a scaling law between the fluctuations in the number of messages sent by members and their level of activity. Gibrat's law has been essent...
Quantification of human group-behavior has so far defied an empirical, falsifiable approach. This is...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Does the pattern of social connections between individuals matter for macroeconomic out-comes? If so...
We investigate the timing of messages sent in two online communities with respect to growt...
Online social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Gowalla allow people to communicate and interac...
We present and study data concerning human behavior in four online social systems: (i) an Internet c...
Human populations exhibit complex behaviors—characterized by long-range correlations and surges in a...
Abstract. We investigate the timing of messages sent in two online communities with respect to growt...
Human communication in social networks is dominated by emergent statistical laws such as non-trivial...
(31 pages (main text: 11; SI: 20), 15 figures, 3 tables)The structure and dynamic of social network ...
We study behavioral action sequences of players in a massive multiplayer online game. In their virtu...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Millions of interactions between people take place on the Web everyday. In this work, we utilize dat...
Scaling laws have been observed in many natural and engineered systems. Their existence can give use...
The rapid development of the Internet technology enables humans to explore the web and record the tr...
Quantification of human group-behavior has so far defied an empirical, falsifiable approach. This is...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Does the pattern of social connections between individuals matter for macroeconomic out-comes? If so...
We investigate the timing of messages sent in two online communities with respect to growt...
Online social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Gowalla allow people to communicate and interac...
We present and study data concerning human behavior in four online social systems: (i) an Internet c...
Human populations exhibit complex behaviors—characterized by long-range correlations and surges in a...
Abstract. We investigate the timing of messages sent in two online communities with respect to growt...
Human communication in social networks is dominated by emergent statistical laws such as non-trivial...
(31 pages (main text: 11; SI: 20), 15 figures, 3 tables)The structure and dynamic of social network ...
We study behavioral action sequences of players in a massive multiplayer online game. In their virtu...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Millions of interactions between people take place on the Web everyday. In this work, we utilize dat...
Scaling laws have been observed in many natural and engineered systems. Their existence can give use...
The rapid development of the Internet technology enables humans to explore the web and record the tr...
Quantification of human group-behavior has so far defied an empirical, falsifiable approach. This is...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Does the pattern of social connections between individuals matter for macroeconomic out-comes? If so...