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The study's main conclusion, published in the scientific journal, Physical Review E,
is the finding that people communicate in bursts. In this way, our
behaviour (in communication as well as in other activities) does not
happen in a homogenous way over time, but rather there is universal
behaviour in which there is no communication, followed by short
intervals called bursts. "This aspect of human activity which has also
been observed in other activities such as e-mail, web page visits and
stock market operations governs communication between people," the
researchers concluded. The effect of the bursts is that it slows down
the information diffusion since the large periods of inactivity in the
communication between two persons make it less likely that information
is passed from one to the other.
The study also highlights another important aspect of human communications: in group conversations, that is, although it is produced in bursts, these bursts happen at the same time among the members of the social group, which then accelerates information diffusion within these groups.
When, how much, and how do people communicate
The main objective of the research is to try to understand the
temporal pattern of communication among persons in a social network.
"As opposed to the static vision of a social network (who I interact with), our study seeks to understand when and how these social relations are produced," Professor Esteban Moro elaborated. And with two purposes, the first being, to see if relations in a social network can be quantified better, that is, determine if the communication rhythm between two persons allows us to know something about the "strength" or characteristics of the relation (family member, acquaintance, friend, colleague, etc..); and the second, to investigate the impact of these rhythms on the propagation of information in social networks, in processes such as viral marketing, product recommendations, etc.
This study, which receives funding from the Ministry of Science and
Innovation through the MOSAICO Science and Innovation project, has been
possible thanks to the framework agreement that the UC3M has with
Telefónica I+D and a program of Becas de Formación de Doctores.
(Professional Training Grants for PhD's) In addition, the company
facilitated access to totally anonymous databases of calls in a country
during a period of eleven months. In all, the researchers analyzed
approximately 9,000 million calls between 20 million people, around 30
percent of the population of a country.
"This large volume of data and the extended time period guarantees the representiveness and universality in the results," pointed out another one of the study's author, Giovanna Miritello, a PhD candidate in the Mathematics Department of UC3M, with a grant-contract from Telefónica I+D.