How infectious are you?

By Molly Flatt

No, I’m not talking about the ubiquitous swine flu, or even this beautifully-URL’d little gem. I’m talking about the Spanish researchers who have been investigating how the viral nature of online memes is highly dependent on the ‘infectiousness’ of the people carrying them.

Faris Yakob on spreadability

Whereas standard calculations around the viral potential of content focuses on the properties of the content itself (how funny, how useful, how sticky it is), José Luis Iribarren from IBM and Esteban Moro at the Carlos III University in Madrid have built a model which takes into account how individual behaviour affects its spread (i.e. how quickly and enthusiastically different people pass it on). It’s proving startlingly accurate, and the researchers believe that it could be used for social media as well as email.

The speed and volume of word of mouth are only two ways to measure its success – it’s important to consider emotional engagement, long term impact, relevance and much more – but this is undeniably cool. Read the full New Scientist article here.

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  • http://www.allerhed.com/2009/08/16/shared-items-august-16-2009/ Shared Items – August 16, 2009 | disruptive by nature

    [...] How infectious are you? [...]

  • http://www.kristofermencak.com/2009/09/content-context-and-predicting-viral-spread/ Content, context and predicting viral spread | Kristofer Mencák

    [...] Molly Flatt from 1000heads pointed towards an article in New Scientist lately. Spanish researchers José Luis Iribarren from IBM and Esteban Moro at the Carlos III University in Madrid developed a method to accurately predict how quickly and widely new pieces of information, or “memes“, will spread. “The secret, they say, is to recognise the fact that people vary in how “infectious” they are when it comes to sharing content online. While some people pass on things they receive right away, others do so after some delay, or not at all.” [...]