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Just a Few Seeds More: Value of Network Information for Diffusion
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2018
Year
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Network AnalysisSocial InfluenceCommunicationSocial NetworkKnowledge DiffusionJournalismComputational Social ScienceNetwork EvolutionSocial MediaNetwork InformationInformation PropagationOptimal SetSocial Network AnalysisOptimal SeedsInformation ManagementNetwork TheorySocial Network AggregationFew SeedsNetwork ScienceInformation DiffusionArts
Identifying the optimal set of individuals to first receive information ('seeds') in a social network is a widely-studied question in many settings, such as the diffusion of information, microfinance programs, and new technologies. Numerous studies have proposed various network-centrality based heuristics to choose seeds in a way that is likely to boost diffusion. Here we show that, for some frequently studied diffusion processes, randomly seeding s plus x individuals can prompt a larger cascade than optimally targeting the best s individuals, for a small x. We prove our results for large classes of random networks, but also show that they hold in simulations over several real-world networks. This suggests that the returns to collecting and analyzing network information to identify the optimal seeds may not be economically significant. Given these findings, practitioners interested in communicating a message to a large number of people may wish to compare the cost of network-based targeting to that of slightly expanding initial outreach.