2,881 research outputs found

    The Effect of Social Feedback in a Reddit Weight Loss Community

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    This is a preprint of an article appearing at ACM Digital Health 201

    Are All Successful Communities Alike? Characterizing and Predicting the Success of Online Communities

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    The proliferation of online communities has created exciting opportunities to study the mechanisms that explain group success. While a growing body of research investigates community success through a single measure -- typically, the number of members -- we argue that there are multiple ways of measuring success. Here, we present a systematic study to understand the relations between these success definitions and test how well they can be predicted based on community properties and behaviors from the earliest period of a community's lifetime. We identify four success measures that are desirable for most communities: (i) growth in the number of members; (ii) retention of members; (iii) long term survival of the community; and (iv) volume of activities within the community. Surprisingly, we find that our measures do not exhibit very high correlations, suggesting that they capture different types of success. Additionally, we find that different success measures are predicted by different attributes of online communities, suggesting that success can be achieved through different behaviors. Our work sheds light on the basic understanding of what success represents in online communities and what predicts it. Our results suggest that success is multi-faceted and cannot be measured nor predicted by a single measurement. This insight has practical implications for the creation of new online communities and the design of platforms that facilitate such communities.Comment: To appear at The Web Conference 201

    Estimating community feedback effect on topic choice in social media with predictive modeling

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    Social media users post content on various topics. A defining feature of social media is that other users can provide feedback—called community feedback—to their content in the form of comments, replies, and retweets. We hypothesize that the amount of received feedback influences the choice of topics on which a social media user posts. However, it is challenging to test this hypothesis as user heterogeneity and external confounders complicate measuring the feedback effect. Here, we investigate this hypothesis with a predictive approach based on an interpretable model of an author’s decision to continue the topic of their previous post. We explore the confounding factors, including author’s topic preferences and unobserved external factors such as news and social events, by optimizing the predictive accuracy. This approach enables us to identify which users are susceptible to community feedback. Overall, we find that 33% and 14% of active users in Reddit and Twitter, respectively, are influenced by community feedback. The model suggests that this feedback alters the probability of topic continuation up to 14%, depending on the user and the amount of feedback

    Detecting Depression in Social Media : An Emotional Analysis Approach

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    Depression has been an ongoing mental health issue that has been affecting a wide range of humanity, particularly the young adults. To address and observe the more general public in a natural habitat, social media is examined for constructing a system to accurately detect depression. Despite the assiduous effort to construct a novel mechanism to detect depression from social media, behavioral approaches had underlying problems for users with a short activity span. To address this problem, emotion analysis was used as a tool to extract the emotion(s) of a user’s post to identify those with depression. Via machine learning techniques to construct an emotion classifier which in turn creates emotion embeddings for a binary classifier, this study proposes a pipeline structure to identify reddit posts from the depression subreddit. The model yielded promising results, introducing emotional analysis as a novel methodology in assessing mental health within social media
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