The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature means that information propagation within each community is highly facilitated, promoting complex collective dynamics in view of information exchange. In this work, we focus on a community of scientists and study, in particular, how the awareness of a scientific paper is spread. Our work is based on the web usage statistics obtained from the PLoS Article Level Metrics dataset compiled by PLoS. The cumulative number of HTML views was found to follow a long tail distribution which is reasonably well-fitted by a lognormal one. We modeled the diffusion of information by a random multiplicative process, and thus extracted the rates of information s...
In the blog world, bloggers produce information, establish relationships with other bloggers in orde...
An analysis of article-level metrics of 27,856 PLOS ONE articles reveals that the number of tweets w...
<div><div>"Science and Facebook: the same popularity law!" data for figures 1 and 3.</div></div><div...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
Social media has become an important channel for publicizing academic research. Employing a dataset ...
In this research work we address the limitations of the current scientic knowledge dissemination mod...
Social media data have been increasingly used to assess the impact of scholarly research. Such data ...
<p>Social media data have been increasingly used to assess the impact of scholarly research. Such da...
Information spreading in online social communities has attracted tremendous attention due to its utm...
We study the dynamics of information propagation in environments of low-overhead personal publishing...
Information spreading in online social communities has attracted tremendous attention due to its utm...
A blogosphere is a representative online social network established through blog users and their rel...
The distribution of scientific citations for publications selected with different rules (author, top...
The growing presence of research shared on social media, coupled with the increase in freely availab...
In the blog world, bloggers produce information, establish relationships with other bloggers in orde...
An analysis of article-level metrics of 27,856 PLOS ONE articles reveals that the number of tweets w...
<div><div>"Science and Facebook: the same popularity law!" data for figures 1 and 3.</div></div><div...
The presence of web-based communities is a distinctive signature of Web 2.0. The web-based feature m...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
Social media has become an important channel for publicizing academic research. Employing a dataset ...
In this research work we address the limitations of the current scientic knowledge dissemination mod...
Social media data have been increasingly used to assess the impact of scholarly research. Such data ...
<p>Social media data have been increasingly used to assess the impact of scholarly research. Such da...
Information spreading in online social communities has attracted tremendous attention due to its utm...
We study the dynamics of information propagation in environments of low-overhead personal publishing...
Information spreading in online social communities has attracted tremendous attention due to its utm...
A blogosphere is a representative online social network established through blog users and their rel...
The distribution of scientific citations for publications selected with different rules (author, top...
The growing presence of research shared on social media, coupled with the increase in freely availab...
In the blog world, bloggers produce information, establish relationships with other bloggers in orde...
An analysis of article-level metrics of 27,856 PLOS ONE articles reveals that the number of tweets w...
<div><div>"Science and Facebook: the same popularity law!" data for figures 1 and 3.</div></div><div...