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Inferring social roles and statuses in social networks

Proceedings of the 19th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining, 2013
Users in online social networks play a variety of social roles and statuses. For example, users in Twitter can be represented as advertiser, content contributor, information receiver, etc; users in Linkedin can be in different professional roles, such as engineer, salesperson and recruiter. Previous research work mainly focuses on using categorical and
Yuchen Zhao   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Role of Social Anxiety in Social Interaction Difficulties

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1977
Social anxiety was found to be the most common complaint in a sample of psychiatric patients reporting social interaction difficulties. High social anxiety was shown to be associated with impairments to social behaviour in socially anxious psychiatric patients and non-psychiatric volunteers.
R, Hall, D, Goldberg
openaire   +2 more sources

The Roles of Social Network Mavens

2016 12th International Conference on Mobile Ad-Hoc and Sensor Networks (MSN), 2016
This paper studies social influence from the perspective of users' characteristics. The importance of users' characteristics in word-of-mouth applications has been emphasized in economics and marketing fields. We model a category of users called mavens where their unique characteristics nominate them to be the preferable seeds in viral marketing ...
Hussah Albinali   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Role of Social Media for Innovation

2013
It is now well-documented that social media can play an important role in supporting the innovation process. Social approaches are most commonly thought to be useful in either idea generation, as in open innovation approaches, or in idea diffusion.
Kastelle, Tim, Ohr, Ralph
openaire   +3 more sources

On the social role of computer communications

Proceedings of the IEEE, 1972
Computer-communication systems appear essential to meeting many needs in our society resulting from greater interdependence and complexity of operation and from rising expectations. There are, in principle, different ways of utilizing them for the same purposes, with radically different social consequences.
openaire   +1 more source

Social roles for opportunistic forwarding

Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Mobile Opportunistic Networking, 2010
Opportunistic networks exploit human encounters to enable new mobile networked applications. Efficient routing for these types of networks relies on utilising encounters between nodes so that messages are moved closer to their destination. Previous work has looked at using encounter-based social network data for routing.
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Social Roles

2018
Alexandra N. Fisher, Theresa H. He
openaire   +2 more sources

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