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      Social Computing and the Attention Economy

      Journal of Statistical Physics
      Springer Nature

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          Strong regularities in world wide web surfing

          One of the most common modes of accessing information in the World Wide Web is surfing from one document to another along hyperlinks. Several large empirical studies have revealed common patterns of surfing behavior. A model that assumes that users make a sequence of decisions to proceed to another page, continuing as long as the value of the current page exceeds some threshold, yields the probability distribution for the number of pages that a user visits within a given Web site. This model was verified by comparing its predictions with detailed measurements of surfing patterns. The model also explains the observed Zipf-like distributions in page hits observed at Web sites.
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            Predicting the popularity of online content

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              Is Open Access

              Novelty and Collective Attention

              The subject of collective attention is central to an information age where millions of people are inundated with daily messages. It is thus of interest to understand how attention to novel items propagates and eventually fades among large populations. We have analyzed the dynamics of collective attention among one million users of an interactive website -- \texttt{digg.com} -- devoted to thousands of novel news stories. The observations can be described by a dynamical model characterized by a single novelty factor. Our measurements indicate that novelty within groups decays with a stretched-exponential law, suggesting the existence of a natural time scale over which attention fades.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Statistical Physics
                J Stat Phys
                Springer Nature
                0022-4715
                1572-9613
                April 2013
                September 25 2012
                : 151
                : 1-2
                : 329-339
                Article
                10.1007/s10955-012-0596-5
                b85fa674-4b63-48af-b5c4-cec704d592e7
                © 2012
                History

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