• DocumentCode
    589050
  • Title

    Better the Tweeter You Know: Social Signals on Twitter

  • Author

    Chorley, M.J. ; Colombo, G.B. ; Allen, Stuart M. ; Whitaker, R.M.

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Inf., Cardiff Univ., Cardiff, UK
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    3-5 Sept. 2012
  • Firstpage
    277
  • Lastpage
    282
  • Abstract
    We present results from a web-based experiment conducted to assess the effect of Twitter metadata on decision making in content consumption. Participants were presented with information concerning two tweets and asked which they would prefer to read. Analysis of the results shows that recognition of the author as being within the readers local network is highly influential in the decision to read a tweet. This has analogies with results from cognitive psychology on decision making processes such as the recognition heuristic. The role of more detailed quantitative metadata has also been assessed. Surprisingly, metadata describing the popularity of tweet authors in terms of the number of followers or the number of tweets written has no significant impact on decision making, while metadata describing the tweet content (the number of retweets) has a significant impact, with a large proportion of users preferring to read content that has been retweeted a larger number of times. When friendship information and quantitative values are combined the impact of the friendship information is reduced, but a larger proportion of users still prefer to choose based on this information, while the impact of the retweet value is reduced.
  • Keywords
    decision making; meta data; psychology; social aspects of automation; social networking (online); Twitter metadata; cognitive psychology; content consumption decision making; decision making processes; friendship information; quantitative metadata; quantitative values; social signals; tweet authors; tweet content; Avatars; Conferences; Decision making; Humans; Measurement; Twitter;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Privacy, Security, Risk and Trust (PASSAT), 2012 International Conference on and 2012 International Confernece on Social Computing (SocialCom)
  • Conference_Location
    Amsterdam
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-5638-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SocialCom-PASSAT.2012.27
  • Filename
    6406256