Self-organization in social tagging systems

Chuang Liu, Chi Ho Yeung, and Zi-Ke Zhang
Phys. Rev. E 83, 066104 – Published 9 June 2011

Abstract

Individuals often imitate each other to fall into the typical group, leading to a self-organized state of typical behaviors in a community. In this paper, we model self-organization in social tagging systems and illustrate the underlying interaction and dynamics. Specifically, we introduce a model in which individuals adjust their own tagging tendency to imitate the average tagging tendency. We found that when users are of low confidence, they tend to imitate others and lead to a self-organized state with active tagging. On the other hand, when users are of high confidence and are stubborn to change, tagging becomes inactive. We observe a phase transition at a critical level of user confidence when the system changes from one regime to the other. The distributions of post length obtained from the model are compared to real data, which show good agreement.

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  • Received 2 February 2011

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.83.066104

©2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Chuang Liu1,2, Chi Ho Yeung3,4,*, and Zi-Ke Zhang3,5,†

  • 1School of Business, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China
  • 2Engineering Research Center of Process Systems Engineering (Ministry of Education), East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China
  • 3Department of Physics, University of Fribourg, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland
  • 4The Nonlinearity and Complexity Research Group, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, United Kingdom
  • 5Web Sciences Center, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu 610054, China

  • *chbyeung@gmail.com
  • zhangzike@gmail.com

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Issue

Vol. 83, Iss. 6 — June 2011

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