How heterogeneous social influence acts on human decision-making in online social networks

被引:3
|
作者
Ni, Xuelian [1 ]
Xiong, Fei [1 ]
Pan, Shirui [2 ]
Chen, Hongshu [3 ]
Wu, Jia [4 ]
Wang, Liang [5 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Jiaotong Univ, Sch Elect & Informat Engn, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China
[2] Griffith Univ, Sch Informat & Commun Technol, Nathan, Qld 4215, Australia
[3] Beijing Inst Technol, Sch Management & Econ, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[4] Macquarie Univ, Sch Comp, Macquarie Pk, Australia
[5] Northwestern Polytech Univ, Sch Comp Sci, Xian 10072, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Social influence; Decision-making; Social networks; Opinion dynamics; OPINION DYNAMICS; DISSEMINATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.chaos.2023.113617
中图分类号
O1 [数学];
学科分类号
0701 ; 070101 ;
摘要
Social network-based tasks frequently emphasize the influence of direct neighbors on human decision-making. However, there is no objective consensus on whether direct neighbors are influential in all circumstances, or any other type of "neighbors" who have a greater impact. In this study, we investigate the patterns of hetero-geneous social influence on human decision-making from the perspectives of opinions, behaviors, preferences and decision probabilities across three large-scale online networks. Our results demonstrate that the influence of similar behavior during exploration on decision-making outperforms that of explicit social relationships regardless of relationship sparsity, yet is associated with shared experiences, network structures, and individual attributes. Specifically, at low levels of experiences, similar behavior during exploration drives human behavioral shifts from bystanders to participants more effectively than explicit social relationships. Further incorporating heterogeneous influence into opinion dynamics through the matrix factorization framework, we reveal the mechanism of heterogeneous social influence acting on decision-making in online networks, with implications for understanding human decision-making.
引用
下载
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] How Do Online Social Networks Support Decision Making? A Pluralistic Research Agenda
    Sadovykh, Valeri
    Sundaram, David
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 49TH ANNUAL HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES (HICSS 2016), 2016, : 2256 - 2265
  • [22] How Do Online Social Networks Support Decision Making? A Pluralistic Research Agenda
    Sadovykh, Valeri
    Sundaram, David
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2015 IEEE/ACM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCES IN SOCIAL NETWORKS ANALYSIS AND MINING (ASONAM 2015), 2015, : 787 - 794
  • [23] WOMEN AND ABORTION - ATTITUDES, SOCIAL NETWORKS, DECISION-MAKING
    FARIA, G
    BARRETT, E
    GOODMAN, LM
    SOCIAL WORK IN HEALTH CARE, 1985, 11 (01) : 85 - 99
  • [24] Decision-making by extreme athletes: the influence of their social circle
    Vande Vliet, Eric
    Ingles, Eduard
    HELIYON, 2021, 7 (01)
  • [25] Social Glass: A Platform for Urban Analytics and Decision-making Through Heterogeneous Social Data
    Bocconi, Stefano
    Bozzon, Alessandro
    Psyllidis, Achilleas
    Bolivar, Christiaan Titos
    Houben, Geert-Jan
    WWW'15 COMPANION: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 24TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WORLD WIDE WEB, 2015, : 175 - 178
  • [26] DECISION-MAKING AND SOCIAL INFLUENCE - MODEL AND AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST
    CAMILLERI, SF
    BERGER, J
    SOCIOMETRY, 1967, 30 (04): : 365 - 378
  • [27] Influence of social and cultural patterns on decision-making in oncology
    Soum-Pouyalet, F.
    Regnier, V.
    Querre, M.
    Jacquin, J. -P.
    Hubert, A.
    Debled, M.
    BULLETIN DU CANCER, 2009, 96 (06) : 733 - 739
  • [28] Social Influence in Adolescent Decision-Making: A Formal Framework
    Ciranka, Simon
    van den Bos, Wouter
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [29] The Influence of Emotion Regulation on Social Interactive Decision-Making
    van't Wout, Mascha
    Chang, Luke J.
    Sanfey, Alan G.
    EMOTION, 2010, 10 (06) : 815 - 821
  • [30] Social Influence and Decision-Making: Evaluating Agent Networks in Village Responses to Change in Freshwater
    Altaweel, Mark
    Alessa, Lilian N.
    Kliskey, Andrew D.
    JASSS-THE JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL SOCIETIES AND SOCIAL SIMULATION, 2010, 13 (01):