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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Van Koevering, Katherine, Ye, Meryl, Kleinberg, Jon
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.11794
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author Van Koevering, Katherine
Ye, Meryl
Kleinberg, Jon
author_facet Van Koevering, Katherine
Ye, Meryl
Kleinberg, Jon
contents Broad topics in online platforms represent a type of meso-scale between individual user-defined communities and the whole platform; they typically consist of related communities that address different facets of a shared topic. Users often engage with the topic by moving among the communities within a single category. We find that there are strong regularities in the aggregate pattern of user migration, in that the communities comprising a topic can be ordered in a partial order such that there is more migration in the direction defined by the partial order than against it. Ordered along this overall direction, we find that communities in aggregate become smaller, less toxic, and more linguistically distinctive, suggesting a picture consistent with specialization. We study directions defined not just in the movement of users but also by the movement of URLs and by the direction of mentions from one community to another; each of these produces a consistent direction, but the directions all differ from each other. We show how, collectively, these distinct trends help organize the structure of large online topics and compare our findings across both Reddit and Wikipedia and in simulations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_11794
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle What's in a Niche? Migration Patterns in Online Communities
Van Koevering, Katherine
Ye, Meryl
Kleinberg, Jon
Social and Information Networks
Broad topics in online platforms represent a type of meso-scale between individual user-defined communities and the whole platform; they typically consist of related communities that address different facets of a shared topic. Users often engage with the topic by moving among the communities within a single category. We find that there are strong regularities in the aggregate pattern of user migration, in that the communities comprising a topic can be ordered in a partial order such that there is more migration in the direction defined by the partial order than against it. Ordered along this overall direction, we find that communities in aggregate become smaller, less toxic, and more linguistically distinctive, suggesting a picture consistent with specialization. We study directions defined not just in the movement of users but also by the movement of URLs and by the direction of mentions from one community to another; each of these produces a consistent direction, but the directions all differ from each other. We show how, collectively, these distinct trends help organize the structure of large online topics and compare our findings across both Reddit and Wikipedia and in simulations.
title What's in a Niche? Migration Patterns in Online Communities
topic Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.11794