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Published: 2015-02-16

Patterns in large data show how information travels

NEWS According to Fariba Karimi, network scientist at Umeå University, analysis of massive online data can reveal what information matters to us and with whom we have most in common. For example, networks can be used to study how information travels from one part of the world to another. She defends her thesis on Friday 20 February.

With the globalization of technology, everyone has access to all types of information online. But does the globalization actually make people’s opinions and interests come closer together? Fariba Karimi and her collaborators addressed this question in one of her thesis studies, where they investigated how people edit content on Wikipedia.

The results show that people care about local and regional information related to sports, media, celebrities or local places. Moreover, people from countries with similar language or historic backgrounds care about similar information.

“We share similar interests in information with those that we share common language or history. The results of this study also reveal which countries have a similarity in information interests, something that has not been studied before” says Fariba Karimi.

Each coloured circle shows a group of countries that have similar information interests. The links show the connections between the groups. The location of the circles are roughly the geographical location of the majority of countries in that group.

For example in Europe, countries are divided into eight clusters. Scandinavian countries are in one cluster with shared interests, while Portuguese and Spaniards have more interests in common with Brazilians than with other Europeans.

“We can project these similarities in a network where countries are nodes and links represent the strengths of similarities. These networks can be used to study how information can travel from one side of the world to the other” says Fariba Karimi.

By extracting patterns from raw datasets from social and economical interactions it’s possible to analyse how information, diseases or financial crises can be spread in the networks. Network analysis is now used to prevent major epidemics, like Ebola.

On a daily basis our friends and colleagues constantly influence us in different ways, from social interaction during coffee breaks to online social media.

“These social interactions happen in time and depending on the time the influence might differ. For example, if you want to buy a smartphone, you consider your recent discussions with friends and colleagues about different phones.  Or people check their social media on specific times during working hours. Time can therefore be an important factor in spreading processes in networks. But previous network modelling did not take the time component into account” says Fariba Karimi.

The thesis shows that taking time into consideration makes the spreading dynamic different compared to static networks.

“This is important, because it can help us to better understand the spreading processes in real social systems that are mostly dynamic and change over time” says Fariba Karimi.

About the dissertation defence:

On February 20 Fariba Karimi, the Department of Physics, Umeå University, defends her thesis: Tightly knit – Spreading processes in empirical temporal network. Swedish title: Tätt sammansvetsad – Spridningsprocesser i empiriska temporala nätverk. The dissertation takes place at 12.00 in room NC300, the Natural Science Building. Faculty opponent is Dr Vittoria Colizza, Pierre et Marie Curie University, Paris, France.

The thesis is published digitally

Fariba Karimi has a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in theoretical physics from Shiraz and Beheshti University in Iran. She moved to Sweden in 2009 and received a second Master’s degree in physics at Lund University. She then decided to move to Umeå to pursue her PhD degree in the field of networks and complex systems. After her dissertation she is moving to Cologne, Germany, for postdoctoral research in the Leibnitz Institute for the computational social science.

High resolution photo for downloading 

For more information, please contact:

Fariba Karimi, Department of Physics, Umeå UniversityPhone: +46702867078
E-mail: fariba.karimi@umu.se

Editor: Ingrid Söderbergh