Results 1 - 10
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3,330
Maximizing the Spread of Influence Through a Social Network
- In KDD
, 2003
"... Models for the processes by which ideas and influence propagate through a social network have been studied in a number of domains, including the diffusion of medical and technological innovations, the sudden and widespread adoption of various strategies in game-theoretic settings, and the effects of ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 990 (7 self)
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Models for the processes by which ideas and influence propagate through a social network have been studied in a number of domains, including the diffusion of medical and technological innovations, the sudden and widespread adoption of various strategies in game-theoretic settings, and the effects
Ontologies are us: A unified model of social networks and semantics
- In International Semantic Web Conference
, 2005
"... Abstract. On the Semantic Web ontologies are most commonly treated as artifacts created by knowledge engineers for a particular community. The task of the engineers is to forge a common understanding within the community and to formalize the agreements, prerequisites of reusing domain knowledge in i ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 466 (3 self)
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Abstract. On the Semantic Web ontologies are most commonly treated as artifacts created by knowledge engineers for a particular community. The task of the engineers is to forge a common understanding within the community and to formalize the agreements, prerequisites of reusing domain knowledge
Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures
, 2000
"...
The World Wide Web has succeeded in large part because its software architecture has been designed to meet the needs of an Internet-scale distributed hypermedia system. The Web has been iteratively developed over the past ten years through a series of modifications to the standards that define its ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 1119 (1 self)
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the architectural design of network-based application software through principled use of architectural constraints, thereby obtaining the functional, performance, and social properties desired of an architecture. An architectural style is a named, coordinated set of architectural constraints.
This dissertation
Ecology of the family as a context for human development: Research perspectives.
- Developmental Psychology,
, 1986
"... This review collates and examines critically a theoretically convergent but widely dispersed body of research on the influence of external environments on the functioning of families as contexts of human development. Investigations falling within this expanding domain include studies of the interac ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 518 (0 self)
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of the interaction of genetics and environment in family processes; transitions and linkages between the family and other major settings influencing development, such as hospitals, day care, peer groups, school, social networks, the world of work (both for parents and children), and neighborhoods and communities
A group mobility model for ad hoc wireless networks
, 1999
"... In this paper, we present a survey of various mobility models in both cellular networks and multi-hop networks. We show that group motion occurs frequently in ad hoc networks, and introduce a novel group mobility model- Reference Point Group Mobility (RPGM)- to represent the relationship among mobil ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 461 (27 self)
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In this paper, we present a survey of various mobility models in both cellular networks and multi-hop networks. We show that group motion occurs frequently in ad hoc networks, and introduce a novel group mobility model- Reference Point Group Mobility (RPGM)- to represent the relationship among
Locating the Nodes -- Cooperative localization in wireless sensor networks
, 2005
"... Accurate and low-cost sensor localization is a critical requirement for the deployment of wireless sensor networks in a wide variety of applications. Low-power wireless sensors may be many hops away from any other sensors with a priori location information. In cooperative localization, sensors work ..."
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Cited by 305 (12 self)
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together in a peer-to-peer manner to make measurements and then form a map of the network. Various application requirements (such as scalability, energy efficiency, and accuracy) will influence the design of sensor localization systems. In this article, we describe measurement-based statistical models
Efficient influence maximization in social networks
- In Proc. of ACM KDD
, 2009
"... Influence maximization is the problem of finding a small subset of nodes (seed nodes) in a social network that could maximize the spread of influence. In this paper, we study the efficient influence maximization from two complementary directions. One is to improve the original greedy algorithm of [5 ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 197 (18 self)
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Influence maximization is the problem of finding a small subset of nodes (seed nodes) in a social network that could maximize the spread of influence. In this paper, we study the efficient influence maximization from two complementary directions. One is to improve the original greedy algorithm
Twitterrank: finding topic-sensitive influential twitterers
- IN IN PROCEEDINGS OF THE 3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WEB SEARCH AND DATA MINING
, 2010
"... This paper focuses on the problem of identifying influential users of micro-blogging services. Twitter, one of the most notable micro-blogging services, employs a social-networking model called “following”, in which each user can choose who she wants to “follow” to receive tweets from without requir ..."
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Cited by 285 (12 self)
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This paper focuses on the problem of identifying influential users of micro-blogging services. Twitter, one of the most notable micro-blogging services, employs a social-networking model called “following”, in which each user can choose who she wants to “follow” to receive tweets from without
Influence and correlation in social networks
- In Proc. of the 14th ACM Int. Conf. on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD’08
"... In many online social systems, social ties between users play an important role in dictating their behavior. One of the ways this can happen is through social influence, the phenomenon that the actions of a user can induce his/her friends to behave in a similar way. In systems where social influence ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 161 (1 self)
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justification of one of the tests by proving that with high probability it succeeds in ruling out influence in a rather general model of social correlation. We also simulate our tests on a number of examples designed by randomly generating actions of nodes on a real social network (from Flickr) according to one
Friendship and Mobility: User Movement In Location-Based Social Networks
"... Even though human movement and mobility patterns have a high degree of freedom and variation, they also exhibit structural patterns due to geographic and social constraints. Using cell phone location data, as well as data from two online location-based social networks, we aim to understand what basi ..."
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Cited by 237 (0 self)
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network structure, while long-distance travel is more influenced by social network ties. We show that social relationships can explain about 10 % to 30 % of all human movement, while periodic behavior explains 50 % to 70%. Based on our findings, we develop a model of human mobility that combines periodic
Results 1 - 10
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