Most individuals in social networks experience a so-called Friendship Paradox: they are less popular than their friends on average. This effect may explain recent findings that widespread social network media use leads to reduced happiness. However the relation between popularity and happiness is poorly understood. A Friendship paradox does not necessarily imply a Happiness paradox where most individuals are less happy than their friends. Here we report the first direct observation of a significant Happiness Paradox in a large-scale online social network of 39,110 Twitter users. Our results reveal that popular individuals are indeed happier and that a majority of individuals experience a significant Happiness paradox. The magnitude of the l...
Contrary to prior research and convention we demonstrate that a large friend network on social netwo...
We demonstrate that people neglect the probability of observing ostentatious information in online s...
The current study investigates whether and how Facebook increases college-age users\u27 subjective ...
Most individuals in social networks experience a so-called Friendship Paradox: they are less popular...
Social networks tend to disproportionally favor connections between individuals with either similar ...
The advent of social media has provided an extraordinary, if imperfect, big data window into the for...
The friendship paradox is the phenomenon that in social networks, people on average have fewer frien...
Feld’s friendship paradox states that “your friends have more friends than you, on average. ” This p...
Can online social contacts replace the importance of real-life social connections in our pursuit of ...
textabstractCan online social contacts replace the importance of real-life social connections in our...
In the pursuit of happiness, it has been conventionally accepted that more friends would bring us a ...
Social networks have many counter-intuitive properties, including the "friendship paradox" that stat...
Research suggests that Facebooking can be both beneficial and detrimental for users’ psychological w...
A recent large Canadian survey permits us to compare face-to-face (‘real-life’) and on-line social n...
A recent large Canadian survey permits us to compare face-to-face ('real-life') and on-line social n...
Contrary to prior research and convention we demonstrate that a large friend network on social netwo...
We demonstrate that people neglect the probability of observing ostentatious information in online s...
The current study investigates whether and how Facebook increases college-age users\u27 subjective ...
Most individuals in social networks experience a so-called Friendship Paradox: they are less popular...
Social networks tend to disproportionally favor connections between individuals with either similar ...
The advent of social media has provided an extraordinary, if imperfect, big data window into the for...
The friendship paradox is the phenomenon that in social networks, people on average have fewer frien...
Feld’s friendship paradox states that “your friends have more friends than you, on average. ” This p...
Can online social contacts replace the importance of real-life social connections in our pursuit of ...
textabstractCan online social contacts replace the importance of real-life social connections in our...
In the pursuit of happiness, it has been conventionally accepted that more friends would bring us a ...
Social networks have many counter-intuitive properties, including the "friendship paradox" that stat...
Research suggests that Facebooking can be both beneficial and detrimental for users’ psychological w...
A recent large Canadian survey permits us to compare face-to-face (‘real-life’) and on-line social n...
A recent large Canadian survey permits us to compare face-to-face ('real-life') and on-line social n...
Contrary to prior research and convention we demonstrate that a large friend network on social netwo...
We demonstrate that people neglect the probability of observing ostentatious information in online s...
The current study investigates whether and how Facebook increases college-age users\u27 subjective ...