Recently, many online social networks, such as MySpace, Orkut, and
Friendster, have faced inactivity decay of their members, which contributed to
the collapse of these networks. The reasons, mechanics, and prevention
mechanisms of such inactivity decay are not fully understood. In this work, we
analyze decayed and alive sub-websites from the StackExchange platform. The
analysis mainly focuses on the inactivity cascades that occur among the members
of these communities. We provide measures to understand the decay process and
statistical analysis to extract the patterns that accompany the inactivity
decay. Additionally, we predict cascade size and cascade virality using machine
learning. The results of this work include a statistically significant
difference of the decay patterns between the decayed and the alive
sub-websites. These patterns are mainly: cascade size, cascade virality,
cascade duration, and cascade similarity. Additionally, the contributed
prediction framework showed satisfactory prediction results compared to a
baseline predictor. Supported by empirical evidence, the main findings of this
work are: (1) the decay process is not governed by only one network measure; it
is better described using multiple measures; (2) the expert members of the
StackExchange sub-websites were mainly responsible for the activity or
inactivity of the StackExchange sub-websites; (3) the Statistics sub-website is
going through decay dynamics that may lead to it becoming fully-decayed; and
(4) decayed sub-websites were originally less resilient to inactivity decay,
unlike the alive sub-websites