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Computing tie strength
Gilbert, Eric E.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/18285
Description
- Title
- Computing tie strength
- Author(s)
- Gilbert, Eric E.
- Issue Date
- 2011-01-14T22:44:48Z
- Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
- Karahalios, Karrie G.
- Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
- Karahalios, Karrie G.
- Committee Member(s)
- Bailey, Brian P.
- Zhai, ChengXiang
- Sandvig, Christian E.
- Terveen, Loren
- Grudin, Jonathan
- Department of Study
- Computer Science
- Discipline
- Computer Science
- Degree Granting Institution
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Degree Name
- Ph.D.
- Degree Level
- Dissertation
- Keyword(s)
- tie strength
- social media
- social networks, computer-mediated communication
- collapsed contexts
- streams
- diffusion
- Abstract
- Relationships make social media social. But, not all relationships are created equal. We have colleagues with whom we correspond intensely, but not deeply; we have childhood friends we consider close, even if we fell out of touch. Social media, however, treats everybody the same: someone is either a completely trusted friend or a total stranger, with little or nothing in between. In reality, relationships fall everywhere along this spectrum, a topic social science has investigated for decades under the name tie strength, a term for the strength of a relationship between two people. Despite many compelling findings along this line of research, social media does not incorporate tie strength or its lessons. Neither does most research on large-scale social phenomena. In social network analyses, a link either exists or not. Relationships have few properties of their own. Simply put, we do not understand a basic property of relationships expressed online. This dissertation addresses this problem, merging the theories behind tie strength with the data from social media. I show how to reconstruct tie strength from digital traces in online social media, and how to apply it as a tool in design and analysis. Specifically, this dissertation makes three contributions. First, it offers a rich, high-accuracy and general way to reconstruct tie strength from digital traces, traces like recency and a message’s emotional content. For example, the model can split users into strong and weak ties with nearly 89% accuracy. I argue that it also offers us a chance to rethink many of social media’s most fundamental design elements. Next, I showcase an example of how we can redesign social media using tie strength: a Twitter application open to anyone on the internet which puts tie strength at the heart of its design. Through this application, called We Meddle, I show that the tie strength model generalizes to a new online community, and that it can solve real people’s practical problems with social media. Finally, I demonstrate that modeling tie strength is an important new tool for analyzing large-scale social phenomena. Specifically, I show that real-life diffusion in online networks depends on tie strength (i.e., it depends on social relationships). As a body of work, diffusion studies make a big simplifying assumption: simple stochastic rules govern person-to-person transmission. How does a disease spread? With constant probability. How does a chain letter diffuse? As a branching process. I present a case where this simplifying assumption does not hold. The results challenge the macroscopic diffusion properties in today’s literature, and they hint at a nest of complexity below a placid stochastic surface. It may be fair to see this dissertation as linking the online to the offline; that is, it connects the traces we leave in social media to how we feel about relationships in real life.
- Graduation Semester
- 2010-12
- Permalink
- http://hdl.handle.net/2142/18285
- Copyright and License Information
- Copyright 2010 Eric Edmund Gilbert
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Dissertations and Theses - Computer Science
Dissertations and Theses from the Dept. of Computer ScienceGraduate Dissertations and Theses at Illinois PRIMARY
Graduate Theses and Dissertations at IllinoisManage Files
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