589 research outputs found
Social Aggregation as a Cooperative Game
A new approach for the description of phenomena of social aggregation is
suggested. On the basis of psychological concepts (as for instance social norms
and cultural coordinates), we deduce a general mechanism for the social
aggregation in which different clusters of individuals can merge according to
the cooperation among the agents. In their turn, the agents can cooperate or
defect according to the clusters distribution inside the system. The fitness of
an individual increases with the size of its cluster, but decreases with the
work the individual had to do in order to join it. In order to test the
reliability of such new approach, we introduce a couple of simple toy models
with the features illustrated above. We see, from this preliminary study, how
the cooperation is the most convenient strategy only in presence of very large
clusters, while on the other hand it is not necessary to have one hundred
percent of cooperators for reaching a totally ordered configuration with only
one megacluster filling the whole system.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Impact of local information in growing networks
We present a new model of the evolutionary dynamics and the growth of on-line
social networks. The model emulates people's strategies for acquiring
information in social networks, emphasising the local subjective view of an
individual and what kind of information the individual can acquire when
arriving in a new social context. The model proceeds through two phases: (a) a
discovery phase, in which the individual becomes aware of the surrounding world
and (b) an elaboration phase, in which the individual elaborates locally the
information trough a cognitive-inspired algorithm. Model generated networks
reproduce main features of both theoretical and real-world networks, such as
high clustering coefficient, low characteristic path length, strong division in
communities, and variability of degree distributions.Comment: In Proceedings Wivace 2013, arXiv:1309.712
Il trasportatore della serotonina in linfociti e piastrine di pazienti psicotici
La psicosi è una manifestazione trasversale a diversi disturbi psichiatrici. La farmacoterapia si avvale, con i più nuovi agenti antipsicotici, di un'azione sul sistema serotoninergico. Lo studio ha la finalità di identificare eventuali mdificazioni nell'espressione e nella funzionalità del trasportatore della serotonina, principale determinante nella regolazione della concentrazione del neurotrasmettitiore a livello del vallo sinaptico
Modeling crowdsourcing as collective problem solving
Crowdsourcing is a process of accumulating the ideas, thoughts or information
from many independent participants, with aim to find the best solution for a
given challenge. Modern information technologies allow for massive number of
subjects to be involved in a more or less spontaneous way. Still, the full
potentials of crowdsourcing are yet to be reached. We introduce a modeling
framework through which we study the effectiveness of crowdsourcing in relation
to the level of collectivism in facing the problem. Our findings reveal an
intricate relationship between the number of participants and the difficulty of
the problem, indicating the optimal size of the crowdsourced group. We discuss
our results in the context of modern utilization of crowdsourcing.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Opinion Dynamics in an Open Community
We here discuss the process of opinion formation in an open community where
agents are made to interact and consequently update their beliefs. New actors
(birth) are assumed to replace individuals that abandon the community (deaths).
This dynamics is simulated in the framework of a simplified model that accounts
for mutual affinity between agents. A rich phenomenology is presented and
discussed with reference to the original (closed group) setting. Numerical
findings are supported by analytical calculations
Self-presentation and emotional contagion on Facebook: new experimental measures of profiles' emotional coherence
Social Networks allow users to self-present by sharing personal contents with
others which may add comments. Recent studies highlighted how the emotions
expressed in a post affect others' posts, eliciting a congruent emotion. So
far, no studies have yet investigated the emotional coherence between wall
posts and its comments. This research evaluated posts and comments mood of
Facebook profiles, analyzing their linguistic features, and a measure to assess
an excessive self-presentation was introduced. Two new experimental measures
were built, describing the emotional loading (positive and negative) of posts
and comments, and the mood correspondence between them was evaluated. The
profiles "empathy", the mood coherence between post and comments, was used to
investigate the relation between an excessive self-presentation and the
emotional coherence of a profile. Participants publish a higher average number
of posts with positive mood. To publish an emotional post corresponds to get
more likes, comments and receive a coherent mood of comments, confirming the
emotional contagion effect reported in literature. Finally, the more empathetic
profiles are characterized by an excessive self-presentation, having more
posts, and receiving more comments and likes. To publish emotional contents
appears to be functional to receive more comments and likes, fulfilling needs
of attention-seeking.Comment: Submitted to Complexit
Uterine devascularization
Uterine devascularization is a valuable alternative to hysterectomy or internal iliac arteries ligation in case of otherwise intractable obstetrical haemorrhage. Has a higher success rate as compared to that of internal iliac arteries ligation. Can be dealt with, vaginally or through abdomen, in this case may be employed curatively or preventively
Egocentric online social networks: Analysis of key features and prediction of tie strength in Facebook
The widespread use of online social networks, such as Facebook and Twitter, is generating a growing amount of accessible data concerning social relationships. The aim of this work is twofold. First, we present a detailed analysis of a real Facebook data set aimed at characterising the properties of human social relationships in online environments. We find that certain properties of online social networks appear to be similar to those found ?offline? (i.e., on human social networks maintained without the use of social networking sites). Our experimental results indicate that on Facebook there is a limited number of social relationships an individual can actively maintain and this number is close to the well-known Dunbar?s number (150) found in offline social networks. Second, we also present a number of linear models that predict tie strength (the key figure to quantitatively represent the importance of social relationships) from a reduced set of observable Facebook variables. Specifically, we are able to predict with good accuracy (i.e., higher than 80%) the strength of social ties by exploiting only four variables describing different aspects of users interaction on Facebook. We find that the recency of contact between individuals ? used in other studies as the unique estimator of tie strength ? has the highest relevance in the prediction of tie strength. Nevertheless, using it in combination with other observable quantities, such as indices about the social similarity between people, can lead to more accurate prediction
Dynamical affinity in opinion dynamics modelling
We here propose a model to simulate the process of opinion formation, which
accounts for the mutual affinity between interacting agents. Opinion and
affinity evolve self-consistently, manifesting a highly non trivial interplay.
A continuous transition is found between single and multiple opinion states.
Fractal dimension and signature of critical behaviour are also reported. A rich
phenomenology is presented and discussed with reference to corresponding
psychological implications
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