Understanding and forecasting lifecycle events in information cascades

Soumajyoti Sarkar*, Ruocheng Guo, Paulo Shakarian

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

Most social network sites allow users to reshare a piece of information posted by a user. As time progresses, the cascade of reshares grows, eventually saturating after a certain time period. While previous studies have focused heavily on one aspect of the cascade phenomenon, specifically predicting when the cascade would go viral, in this paper, we take a more holistic approach by analyzing the occurrence of two events within the cascade lifecycle—the period of maximum growth in terms of surge in reshares and the period where the cascade starts declining in adoption. We address the challenges in identifying these periods and then proceed to make a comparative analysis of these periods from the perspective of network topology. We study the effect of several node-centric structural measures on the reshare responses using Granger causality which helps us quantify the significance of the network measures and understand the extent to which the network topology impacts the growth dynamics. This evaluation is performed on a dataset of 7407 cascades extracted from the Weibo social network. Using our causality framework, we found that an entropy measure based on nodal degree causally affects the occurrence of these events in 93.95% of cascades. Surprisingly, this outperformed clustering coefficient and PageRank which we hypothesized would be more indicative of the growth dynamics based on earlier studies. We also extend the Granger causality Vector Autoregression model to forecast the times at which the events occur in the cascade lifecycle.
Original languageEnglish
Article number55
JournalSocial Network Analysis and Mining
Volume7
Issue number1
Online published4 Nov 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017
Externally publishedYes

Research Keywords

  • Causality
  • Information cascades
  • Network centralities
  • Social network analysis

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