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      Experimental evidence for tipping points in social convention

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      Science
      American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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          Threshold Models of Collective Behavior

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            A Theory of Fads, Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades

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              The spread of behavior in an online social network experiment.

              How do social networks affect the spread of behavior? A popular hypothesis states that networks with many clustered ties and a high degree of separation will be less effective for behavioral diffusion than networks in which locally redundant ties are rewired to provide shortcuts across the social space. A competing hypothesis argues that when behaviors require social reinforcement, a network with more clustering may be more advantageous, even if the network as a whole has a larger diameter. I investigated the effects of network structure on diffusion by studying the spread of health behavior through artificially structured online communities. Individual adoption was much more likely when participants received social reinforcement from multiple neighbors in the social network. The behavior spread farther and faster across clustered-lattice networks than across corresponding random networks.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science
                Science
                American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
                0036-8075
                1095-9203
                June 07 2018
                June 08 2018
                June 07 2018
                June 08 2018
                : 360
                : 6393
                : 1116-1119
                Article
                10.1126/science.aas8827
                29880688
                404030cc-63ce-4b03-808b-34ba00958571
                © 2018

                http://www.sciencemag.org/about/science-licenses-journal-article-reuse

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