Newcomers to a social network show preferential attachment, a tendency to befriend those with many friends. Here, we show that preferential attachment is equivalent to a form of 'probability matching' commonly found in studies of decision-making. This equivalence, whereby newcomers probability match to a social signal akin to popularity, marries network science to the study of decision-making and raises new questions about how individual psychology impacts the social structure of groups. We asked people to view a visualization of a social network and to select group members whom they would like to meet and befriend. People varied in how strongly they weighed popularity and this was mildly correlated with aspects of their personality. Indivi...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
<div><p>Newcomers to a social network show <i>preferential attachment</i>, a tendency to befriend th...
Newcomers to a social network show preferential attachment, a tendency to befriend those with many f...
Newcomers to a social network show preferential attachment, a tendency to befriend those with many f...
Social influence drives human selection behaviours when numerous objects competing for limited atten...
9 pages, 6 figures (v2: added property correlation measures, and various remarks)The mechanism of pr...
9 pages, 6 figures (v2: added property correlation measures, and various remarks)The mechanism of pr...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Personality affects how emerging adults select friends and how they are selected on social networkin...
textabstractGame-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
<p>(Color online) <b>a,</b> An example of user-business bipartite network with social structure to i...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
<div><p>Newcomers to a social network show <i>preferential attachment</i>, a tendency to befriend th...
Newcomers to a social network show preferential attachment, a tendency to befriend those with many f...
Newcomers to a social network show preferential attachment, a tendency to befriend those with many f...
Social influence drives human selection behaviours when numerous objects competing for limited atten...
9 pages, 6 figures (v2: added property correlation measures, and various remarks)The mechanism of pr...
9 pages, 6 figures (v2: added property correlation measures, and various remarks)The mechanism of pr...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Personality affects how emerging adults select friends and how they are selected on social networkin...
textabstractGame-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
<p>(Color online) <b>a,</b> An example of user-business bipartite network with social structure to i...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...
Game-theoretic models of network formation typically assume that people create relations so as to ma...