opinion dynamics in virtual arenas: topology, morphogenesis and diffusion
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Webfluence was a 24-month project (Jan 2009-Dec 2010) mainly supported by the ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche) and involving four partners: CNRS (CREA), Orange Labs, linkfluence and UPMC (LIP6). Webfluence aimed at studying some knowledge networks stemming from so-called "Web 2.0" websites. These social systems broadly provide a large amount of open-access, very precise, dynamic, structural and semantic data about sizeable groups of individuals. Blogs, in particular, feature rich socio-semantic interactions which, in turn, make it possible to adopt a formal and quantitative point of view on several issues raised by social sciences. They moreover provide the occasion to investigate further current questions in complex systems theory: morphogenesis phenomena, information broadcast process and interactions at several scales, levels and in various networks. More precisely, Webfluence endeavored at analyzing, modeling and reconstructing the structure and dynamics of two specific social networks of the French Web: blogs of political opinion, and blogs dealing with leisure activities. The underlying complex socio-semantic system modeling enables us to address social science questions pertaining to interactions with traditional media as well as their ability to "inoculate" these mass-media. Additionally, operational metrics regarding the audience and information broadcast have been defined — both as indicators and visualizations. |
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Contributors to this page: System Administrator
,
Sylvie Greverend
,
David Chavalarias
,
Camille Roth
and
camiller
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Page last modified on Tuesday 04 January, 2011 00:18:08 CET by System Administrator.
(Version 62)