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      Social-aware D2D communications: qualitative insights and quantitative analysis

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          A 61-million-person experiment in social influence and political mobilization.

          Human behaviour is thought to spread through face-to-face social networks, but it is difficult to identify social influence effects in observational studies, and it is unknown whether online social networks operate in the same way. Here we report results from a randomized controlled trial of political mobilization messages delivered to 61 million Facebook users during the 2010 US congressional elections. The results show that the messages directly influenced political self-expression, information seeking and real-world voting behaviour of millions of people. Furthermore, the messages not only influenced the users who received them but also the users' friends, and friends of friends. The effect of social transmission on real-world voting was greater than the direct effect of the messages themselves, and nearly all the transmission occurred between 'close friends' who were more likely to have a face-to-face relationship. These results suggest that strong ties are instrumental for spreading both online and real-world behaviour in human social networks.
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            Identifying influential and susceptible members of social networks.

            Identifying social influence in networks is critical to understanding how behaviors spread. We present a method that uses in vivo randomized experimentation to identify influence and susceptibility in networks while avoiding the biases inherent in traditional estimates of social contagion. Estimation in a representative sample of 1.3 million Facebook users showed that younger users are more susceptible to influence than older users, men are more influential than women, women influence men more than they influence other women, and married individuals are the least susceptible to influence in the decision to adopt the product offered. Analysis of influence and susceptibility together with network structure revealed that influential individuals are less susceptible to influence than noninfluential individuals and that they cluster in the network while susceptible individuals do not, which suggests that influential people with influential friends may be instrumental in the spread of this product in the network.
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              Device-to-device communication as an underlay to LTE-advanced networks

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                IEEE Communications Magazine
                IEEE Commun. Mag.
                Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
                0163-6804
                June 2014
                June 2014
                : 52
                : 6
                : 150-158
                Article
                10.1109/MCOM.2014.6829957
                f49c6044-50b4-4cf2-87f5-dc9a84ef4b63
                © 2014
                History

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