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      Happiness is assortative in online social networks.

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          Abstract

          Online social networking communities may exhibit highly complex and adaptive collective behaviors. Since emotions play such an important role in human decision making, how online networks modulate human collective mood states has become a matter of considerable interest. In spite of the increasing societal importance of online social networks, it is unknown whether assortative mixing of psychological states takes place in situations where social ties are mediated solely by online networking services in the absence of physical contact. Here, we show that the general happiness, or subjective well-being (SWB), of Twitter users, as measured from a 6-month record of their individual tweets, is indeed assortative across the Twitter social network. Our results imply that online social networks may be equally subject to the social mechanisms that cause assortative mixing in real social networks and that such assortative mixing takes place at the level of SWB. Given the increasing prevalence of online social networks, their propensity to connect users with similar levels of SWB may be an important factor in how positive and negative sentiments are maintained and spread through human society. Future research may focus on how event-specific mood states can propagate and influence user behavior in "real life."

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Artif Life
          Artificial life
          MIT Press - Journals
          1064-5462
          1064-5462
          2011
          : 17
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Indiana University, School of Informatics and Computing, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA. jbollen@indiana.edu
          Article
          10.1162/artl_a_00034
          21554117
          1d07ed08-359d-4446-a0d9-4d38d52cfca7
          History

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