(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - We've all heard it: The Internet has flattened the world, allowing social networks to spring up overnight, independent of geography or socioeconomic status. Who needs face time with the people around you when you can email, text or tweet to and from almost anywhere in the world? Twitter, the social networking and microblogging site, is said to have more than 300 million users worldwide who follow, forward and respond to each other's 140-character tweets about anything and everything, 24/7.
But MIT researchers who studied the growth of the newly hatched Twitter from 2006 to 2009 say the site's growth in the United States actually relied primarily on media attention and traditional social networks based on geographic proximity and socioeconomic similarity. In other words, at least during those early years, birds of a feather flocked — and tweeted — together.
In their study of Twitter's "contagion process," the researchers looked at data from 16,000 U.S. cities, focusing on the 408 with the highest number of Twitter users and seeking to update traditional models of how information spreads and technology is adopted.
Just as marketing experts sometimes label consumers as early adopters, early majority adopters, late majority adopters or laggards, the researchers characterized cities in those terms, based on when Twitter accounts in a given city reached critical mass. Critical mass is generally defined as the point when something reaches 13.5 percent of the population, which for this study was 13.5 percent of the highest total number of Twitter users in a city through August 2009, the end of the study period.
As with most technologies, the growth in popularity initially spread via young, tech-savvy "innovators," in this case from Twitter's birthplace in San Francisco to greater Boston. But the site's popularity then took a more traditional route of traveling only short distances, implying face-to-face interactions; this approach made early adopters of Somerville, Mass., and Berkeley, Calif. — cities close to Boston and San Francisco, respectively. Twitter use then spread through early majority cities such as Santa Fe and Los Angeles and late majority cities such as Baltimore and Las Vegas before reaching laggards such as Palm Beach, Fla., and Newark, N.J. All these cities ultimately ranked among the 408 nationwide with the largest numbers of Twitter accounts.
"Even on the Internet where we may think the world is flat, it's not," says Marta González, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering and engineering systems at MIT, who is co-author of a paper on this subject appearing this month in the journal PLoS ONE. "The big question for people in industry is 'How do we find the right person or hub to adopt our new app so that it will go viral?' But we found that the lone tech-savvy person can't do it; this also requires word of mouth. The social network needs geographical proximity. … In the U.S. anyway, space and similarity matter."
For nearly 50 years, marketers have studied the "diffusion of innovations" (named by Everett Rogers in his 1962 book of the same title) to predict how the purchase of expensive, durable goods such as cars and refrigerators will spread. But the diffusion of high-tech websites and cheap smartphone apps is thought to occur in a very different way.
"Nobody has ever really looked at the diffusion among innovators of a no-risk, free or low-cost product that's only useful if other people join you. It's a new paradigm in economics: what to do with all these new things that are free and easy to share," says MIT graduate student Jameson Toole, a co-author of the paper.
Meeyoung Cha of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology is the third co-author, and also the person who had the prescience to begin downloading Twitter-published user data (via Twitter API) in May 2006, when there were only a couple of hundred users. She downloaded data through August 2009, when user growth dropped off for a time.
González and Toole said their model of Twitter contagion didn't fit Cha's data until they added media influence, based on the number of news stories appearing weekly in Google News searches, data they acquired using Google Insights for Search, which provides historical search-engine data.
"Other studies have included news media in their models, but usually as a constant," González says. "We saw that news media is not a constant. Instead, it's media responding to people's interest and vice versa, so we included it as random spikes."
The study data include the growth spike that began April 15, 2009, when actor Ashton Kutcher challenged CNN to see who could first attract 1 million Twitter followers. Kutcher ultimately won, reaching the million mark in the wee hours of April 17, about half an hour before CNN. Popular talk-show host Oprah Winfrey invited Kutcher to appear on her show that same day; when she ceremoniously sent her first tweet, the pace of new news stories picked up again, and so did new Twitter accounts.
The Twitter bird was suddenly on all the wires, and Twitter's user accounts increased fourfold because of the media attention, indicating that as recently as 2009, location-based social networks and media attention still held sway over computer-based social networks.
###
Written by Denise Brehm, Civil and Environmental Engineering
MIT research: Traditional social networks fueled Twitter's spread
Site's US growth relied primarily on media attention, geographic proximity of users
2011-12-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Habit formation is enabled by gateway to brain cells
2011-12-22
AUGUSTA, Ga. – A brain cell type found where habits are formed and movement is controlled has receptors that work like computer processors to translate regular activities into habits, researchers report.
"Habits, for better or worse, basically define who we are," said Dr. Joe Z. Tsien, Co-Director of the Brain & Behavior Discovery Institute at Georgia Health Sciences University. Habits also provide mental freedom and flexibility by enabling many activities to be on autopilot while the brain focuses on more urgent matters, he said.
Research published in the journal Neuron ...
Coupon Roo, a New Website Started by a College Student, is Taking the Internet by Storm
2011-12-22
CouponRoo.Com, a leading discount coupon website in the USA, is taking the Internet by storm. The website is started by a college student, and quickly grew to include thousands of retailers. To date, it has included over ten thousand stores on the site.
Discount shopping online
On the Internet, price has always been transparent. In other words, buyers tend to go online to search and compare prices before making a purchase. Retailers are well aware of this fact. In order to capture new customers and retain existing ones, many have resorted to running attractive promotions. ...
Some 'low-gluten' beer contains high levels of gluten
2011-12-22
Beer tested in a new study, including some brands labeled "low-gluten," contains levels of hordein, the form of gluten present in barley, that could cause symptoms in patients with celiac disease (CD), the autoimmune condition treated with a life-long gluten-free diet, scientists are reporting. The study, which weighs in on a controversy over the gluten content of beer, appears in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research.
Michelle Colgrave and colleagues explain that celiac disease (CD) affects more than 2 million people worldwide. Gluten, a protein found in foods and beverages ...
Start the New Year in the Spotlight with a Custom Sign for Your Brand
2011-12-22
Ken Miller, President of Blue Pond Signs, announced today the availability of the 2012 custom signage line for business customers throughout the United States. As many companies seek to refresh their visual identities in the first quarter of the year, Blue Pond Signs streamlines the process of creating customized visual identities, from business signs to logos, in just four weeks.
"Creating a customized corporate visual identity is an important element for companies who seek recognition in today's competitive marketplace" said Miller. "We offer a fast ...
New evidence that bacteria in large intestine have a role in obesity
2011-12-22
Bacteria living in people's large intestine may slow down the activity of the "good" kind of fat tissue, a special fat that quickly burns calories and may help prevent obesity, scientists are reporting in a new study. The discovery, published in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research, could shed light on ways to prevent obesity and promote weight loss, including possible microbial and pharmaceutical approaches, the authors said.
Sandrine P. Claus, Jeremy K. Nicholson and colleagues explain that trillions of bacteria live in the large intestine of healthy people, where they ...
New process could advance use of healthy cells or stem cells to treat disease
2011-12-22
In a discovery that may help speed use of "cell therapy" — with normal cells or stem cells infused into the body to treat disease — scientists are reporting development of a way to deliver therapeutic human cells to diseased areas within the body using a simple magnetic effect. Their report appears in ACS' journal Langmuir.
Rawil Fakhrullin and colleagues explain that cell therapy aims to replace damaged or diseased cells in the human body with normal cells or stem cells. To do so, medical personnel need a way to target these cells to diseased organs or tissues. So-called ...
Home washing machines: Source of potentially harmful ocean 'microplastic' pollution
2011-12-22
WASHINGTON -- The latest episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS) award-winning "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions" podcast series discusses the discovery that household washing machines seem to be a major source of so-called "microplastic" pollution -- bits of polyester and acrylic smaller than the head of a pin -- that researchers now have detected on ocean shorelines worldwide.
In the podcast, Mark Anthony Browne, Ph.D., explains that the accumulation of microplastic debris in marine environments has raised health and safety concerns. The bits of plastic ...
New method of infant pain assessment from Oxford published in JoVE
2011-12-22
Recently, the accuracy of current methods of pain assessment in babies have been called into question. New research from London-area hospitals and the University of Oxford measures brain activity in infants to better understand their pain response.
As every parent knows, interpreting what a baby is feeling is often incredibly difficult. Currently, pain in infants is assessed using the premature infant pain profile (PIPP), which is based on behavioral and physiological body reactions, such as crying and facial expression. Though this is a useful measure, it is largely ...
NIST sensor improvement brings analysis method into mainstream
2011-12-22
An advance in sensor design* by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Waterloo's Institute of Quantum Computing (IQC) could unshackle a powerful, yet high-maintenance technique for exploring materials. The achievement could expand the technique—called neutron interferometry—from a test of quantum mechanics to a tool for industry as well.
[Watch a short YoutTube video on this work at http://youtu.be/A21iXn2NL-8 ]
Neutron beams can be used in dozens of ways to probe complex molecules and other advanced materials, ...
Positive feedback and tumorigenesis
2011-12-22
Cancer cells are essentially immortal. The acquisition of an unlimited capacity to divide – the process of immortalization - is a central event in the genesis of tumors. Normally, cells are subject to stringent mechanisms which control their proliferation. Together these ensure that pre-malignant cells are induced to enter a senescent, non-dividing state or to undergo apoptosis, i.e. commit suicide. A research team led by Professor Heiko Hermeking and Dr. Antje Menssen from LMU's Institute of Pathology has now discovered how the regulatory protein c-MYC subverts these controls, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New route to ‘quantum spin liquid’ materials discovered for first time
Chang’e-6 basalts offer insights on lunar farside volcanism
Chang’e-6 lunar samples reveal 2.83-billion-year-old basalt with depleted mantle source
Zinc deficiency promotes Acinetobacter lung infection: study
How optogenetics can put the brakes on epilepsy seizures
Children exposed to antiseizure meds during pregnancy face neurodevelopmental risks, Drexel study finds
Adding immunotherapy to neoadjuvant chemoradiation may improve outcomes in esophageal cancer
Scientists transform blood into regenerative materials, paving the way for personalized, blood-based, 3D-printed implants
Maarja Öpik to take up the position of New Phytologist Editor-in-Chief from January 2025
Mountain lions coexist with outdoor recreationists by taking the night shift
Students who use dating apps take more risks with their sexual health
Breakthrough idea for CCU technology commercialization from 'carbon cycle of the earth'
Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group
Depression research pioneer Dr. Philip Gold maps disease's full-body impact
Rapid growth of global wildland-urban interface associated with wildfire risk, study shows
Generation of rat offspring from ovarian oocytes by Cross-species transplantation
Duke-NUS scientists develop novel plug-and-play test to evaluate T cell immunotherapy effectiveness
Compound metalens achieves distortion-free imaging with wide field of view
Age on the molecular level: showing changes through proteins
Label distribution similarity-based noise correction for crowdsourcing
The Lancet: Without immediate action nearly 260 million people in the USA predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050
Diabetes medication may be effective in helping people drink less alcohol
US over 40s could live extra 5 years if they were all as active as top 25% of population
Limit hospital emissions by using short AI prompts - study
UT Health San Antonio ranks at the top 5% globally among universities for clinical medicine research
Fayetteville police positive about partnership with social workers
Optical biosensor rapidly detects monkeypox virus
New drug targets for Alzheimer’s identified from cerebrospinal fluid
Neuro-oncology experts reveal how to use AI to improve brain cancer diagnosis, monitoring, treatment
Argonne to explore novel ways to fight cancer and transform vaccine discovery with over $21 million from ARPA-H
[Press-News.org] MIT research: Traditional social networks fueled Twitter's spreadSite's US growth relied primarily on media attention, geographic proximity of users