Varying only population density in a minimal tie-formation model produces a sharp transition from clustered to integrated networks that speeds simple contagions and broadens complex ones.
Information Propagation in Clustered Multilayer Networks
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abstract
In today's world, individuals interact with each other in more complicated patterns than ever. Some individuals engage through online social networks (e.g., Facebook, Twitter), while some communicate only through conventional ways (e.g., face-to-face). Therefore, understanding the dynamics of information propagation among humans calls for a multi-layer network model where an online social network is conjoined with a physical network. In this work, we initiate a study of information diffusion in a clustered multi-layer network model, where all constituent layers are random networks with high clustering. We assume that information propagates according to the SIR model and with different information transmissibility across the networks. We give results for the conditions, probability, and size of information epidemics, i.e., cases where information starts from a single individual and reaches a positive fraction of the population. We show that increasing the level of clustering in either one of the layers increases the epidemic threshold and decreases the final epidemic size in the whole system. An interesting finding is that information with low transmissibility spreads more effectively with a small but densely connected social network, whereas highly transmissible information spreads better with the help of a large but loosely connected social network.
fields
physics.soc-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Networks of agglomeration: how population density rewires social networks and reshapes contagion dynamics
Varying only population density in a minimal tie-formation model produces a sharp transition from clustered to integrated networks that speeds simple contagions and broadens complex ones.