What influences the rise of influencers?

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Swiss and Chinese researchers have developed a model to show how online communities form and social media influencers rise to fame. They found that quality content on a person's page or stream would lead to a person becoming an influencer. They found that other users would actively seek out the best quality content they could receive, rather than just people who had loads of content. The influencers with the best content had the highest number of followers, which was halved in the users with the second best, and so on. 

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From: Springer Nature

Investigating how social media influencers arise

A model to describe the formation of online communities and rise of influencers on social media platforms, based on the quality of user generated content, is reported in a study published in Nature Communications. The findings could improve our understanding of how social media influencers arise.

Social networks can often play a central role in the dissemination of information and can influence public opinion, but our understanding of the phenomena that takes place within these platforms remains elusive. In many popular social media platforms, such as Instagram, YouTube, TikTok and Twitter, users share content and actively engage with the content of other users to form virtual friendships. Interest-based communities often emerge through prominent users that can influence other users with their content.

Nicolò Pagan, Wenjun Mei and colleagues propose a mathematical model for social network formation, where users decide to link/follow each other based on the quality of their content according to their interests. The authors then tested their model against Twitter data in a network composed of over 6,000 scientists. The results suggest that users aim to increase the quality of the content they receive, and continually search for providers of the best quality content through integrated search engines. They found that users producing the highest quality content had twice as many followers as the second, and so on. The authors then validated their model using datasets from Twitch, a popular platform for online gamers. They suggest that the model maps the increase in popularity and network formations more realistically than previous models. 

The findings provide insights into a possible mechanism for how social network communities and influencers are formed.

Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Funder: The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from ETH Zürich and National Natural Science Foundation of China under the grant number 72131001.
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