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FSogol

(46,525 posts)
Thu Jul 2, 2015, 09:48 AM Jul 2015

Worried that certain candidates are popular while others don't appear to be?

Maybe it is social media's fault?

From an MIT Technology Review article entitled: The Social-Network Illusion That Tricks Your Mind - Network scientists have discovered how social networks can create the illusion that something is common when it is actually rare.

One of the curious things about social networks is the way that some messages, pictures, or ideas can spread like wildfire while others that seem just as catchy or interesting barely register at all. The content itself cannot be the source of this difference. Instead, there must be some property of the network that changes to allow some ideas to spread but not others.

Today, we get an insight into why this happens thanks to the work of Kristina Lerman and pals at the University of Southern California. These people have discovered an extraordinary illusion associated with social networks which can play tricks on the mind and explain everything from why some ideas become popular quickly to how risky or antisocial behavior can spread so easily.

Network scientists have known about the paradoxical nature of social networks for some time. The most famous example is the friendship paradox: on average your friends will have more friends than you do.

This comes about because the distribution of friends on social networks follows a power law. So while most people will have a small number of friends, a few individuals have huge numbers of friends. And these people skew the average.


More at: http://www.technologyreview.com/view/538866/the-social-network-illusion-that-tricks-your-mind/

Don't be discouraged by numbers and popularity. It is still 7 Months until the first caucus/primary votes are counted.
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Worried that certain candidates are popular while others don't appear to be? (Original Post) FSogol Jul 2015 OP
Thanks, and glad I don't care about being 'popular!' elleng Jul 2015 #1
An interesting article. Koinos Jul 2015 #2
Thanks. n/t FSogol Jul 2015 #3
I'm not discouraged either. lovemydog Jul 2015 #4
I think that O'Malley's great strength brer cat Jul 2015 #5
ABSOLUTELY, elleng Jul 2015 #6

Koinos

(2,798 posts)
2. An interesting article.
Thu Jul 2, 2015, 10:11 AM
Jul 2015

There are lots of reasons I don't do Facebook. One of them is the "bandwagon" tendency. But there are other reasons.

Years ago, I read this book: "The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier," by Howard Rheingold.

You can read it online at:

http://www.rheingold.com/vc/book/

And Howard Rheingold's home page:

http://rheingold.com/

lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
4. I'm not discouraged either.
Thu Jul 2, 2015, 11:26 AM
Jul 2015

I'm just beginning to know Martin O'Malley an like what I see. I think we need all the allies we can get and I'm considering him as a lifelong ally for the causes that we all must address.

brer cat

(26,272 posts)
5. I think that O'Malley's great strength
Thu Jul 2, 2015, 11:49 AM
Jul 2015

is his record of accomplishments. I keep hearing what wonderful things Bernie will do but where is evidence that he can do them? I can't help but believe that O'Malley's popularity will increase as people learn more about him and especially that he is a bona fide "can do" candidate.

elleng

(136,064 posts)
6. ABSOLUTELY,
Thu Jul 2, 2015, 03:58 PM
Jul 2015

and I suspect that Iowa is a great place for him to begin informing them, especially that he is a bona fide "can do" candidate!

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