Abstract

We study the relaxation response of a social system after endogenous and exogenous bursts of activity using the time series of daily views for nearly 5 million videos on YouTube. We find that most activity can be described accurately as a Poisson process. However, we also find hundreds of thousands of examples in which a burst of activity is followed by an ubiquitous power-law relaxation governing the timing of views. We find that these relaxation exponents cluster into three distinct classes and allow for the classification of collective human dynamics. This is consistent with an epidemic model on a social network containing two ingredients: a power-law distribution of waiting times between cause and action and an epidemic cascade of actions becoming the cause of future actions. This model is a conceptual extension of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem to social systems [Ruelle, D (2004) Phys Today 57:48–53] and [Roehner BM, et al. , (2004) Int J Mod Phys C 15:809–834], and provides a unique framework for the investigation of timing in complex systems.

Keywords

Statistical physicsPoisson distributionRelaxation (psychology)Power lawComputer scienceComplex systemComplex networkSocial systemPhysicsEconometricsMathematicsArtificial intelligenceStatisticsPsychologyNeuroscience

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
105
Issue
41
Pages
15649-15653
Citations
798
Access
Closed

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Riley Crane, Didier Sornette (2008). Robust dynamic classes revealed by measuring the response function of a social system. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 105 (41) , 15649-15653. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0803685105

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DOI
10.1073/pnas.0803685105