Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding

A central problem in the analysis of observational data is inferring causal relationships - what are the underlying causes of the observed behaviors? With the recent proliferation of Big Data from online social networks, it has become important to determine to what extent social influence causes cer...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liotsiou, D, Moreau, L, Halford, S
Format: Conference item
Published: Springer 2016
_version_ 1826259411004293120
author Liotsiou, D
Moreau, L
Halford, S
author_facet Liotsiou, D
Moreau, L
Halford, S
author_sort Liotsiou, D
collection OXFORD
description A central problem in the analysis of observational data is inferring causal relationships - what are the underlying causes of the observed behaviors? With the recent proliferation of Big Data from online social networks, it has become important to determine to what extent social influence causes certain messages to ‘go viral’, and to what extent other causes also play a role. In this paper, we present a causal framework showing that social influence is confounded with personal similarity, traits of the focal item, and external circumstances. Combined with a set of qualitative considerations on the combination of these sources of causation, we show how this framework can enable investigators to systematically evaluate, strengthen and qualify causal claims about social influence, and we demonstrate its usefulness and versatility by applying it to a variety of common online social datasets.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:49:26Z
format Conference item
id oxford-uuid:0fb05b8b-54a1-480f-8d23-0ee311bd2b01
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:49:26Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Springer
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:0fb05b8b-54a1-480f-8d23-0ee311bd2b012022-03-26T09:52:32ZSocial influence: From contagion to a richer causal understandingConference itemhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794uuid:0fb05b8b-54a1-480f-8d23-0ee311bd2b01Symplectic Elements at OxfordSpringer2016Liotsiou, DMoreau, LHalford, SA central problem in the analysis of observational data is inferring causal relationships - what are the underlying causes of the observed behaviors? With the recent proliferation of Big Data from online social networks, it has become important to determine to what extent social influence causes certain messages to ‘go viral’, and to what extent other causes also play a role. In this paper, we present a causal framework showing that social influence is confounded with personal similarity, traits of the focal item, and external circumstances. Combined with a set of qualitative considerations on the combination of these sources of causation, we show how this framework can enable investigators to systematically evaluate, strengthen and qualify causal claims about social influence, and we demonstrate its usefulness and versatility by applying it to a variety of common online social datasets.
spellingShingle Liotsiou, D
Moreau, L
Halford, S
Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title_full Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title_fullStr Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title_full_unstemmed Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title_short Social influence: From contagion to a richer causal understanding
title_sort social influence from contagion to a richer causal understanding
work_keys_str_mv AT liotsioud socialinfluencefromcontagiontoarichercausalunderstanding
AT moreaul socialinfluencefromcontagiontoarichercausalunderstanding
AT halfords socialinfluencefromcontagiontoarichercausalunderstanding