We have analyzed the fully-anonymized headers of 362 million messages exchanged by 4.2 million users of Facebook, an online social network of college students, during a 26 month interval. The data reveal a number of strong daily and weekly regularities which provide insights into the time use of college students and their social lives, including seasonal variations. We also examined how factors such as school affiliation and informal online friend lists affect the observed behavior and temporal patterns. Finally, we show that Facebook users appear to be clustered by school with respect to their temporal messaging patterns.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Golder:2006p2615
%A Golder, Scott A
%A Wilkinson, Dennis M
%A Huberman, Bernardo A
%D 2006
%J arXiv
%K imported
%T Rhythms of social interaction: messaging within a massive online network
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/cs.CY/0611137
%X We have analyzed the fully-anonymized headers of 362 million messages exchanged by 4.2 million users of Facebook, an online social network of college students, during a 26 month interval. The data reveal a number of strong daily and weekly regularities which provide insights into the time use of college students and their social lives, including seasonal variations. We also examined how factors such as school affiliation and informal online friend lists affect the observed behavior and temporal patterns. Finally, we show that Facebook users appear to be clustered by school with respect to their temporal messaging patterns.
@article{Golder:2006p2615,
abstract = {We have analyzed the fully-anonymized headers of 362 million messages exchanged by 4.2 million users of Facebook, an online social network of college students, during a 26 month interval. The data reveal a number of strong daily and weekly regularities which provide insights into the time use of college students and their social lives, including seasonal variations. We also examined how factors such as school affiliation and informal online friend lists affect the observed behavior and temporal patterns. Finally, we show that Facebook users appear to be clustered by school with respect to their temporal messaging patterns.},
added-at = {2008-03-13T16:33:57.000+0100},
author = {Golder, Scott A and Wilkinson, Dennis M and Huberman, Bernardo A},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2cb6aba879628167d1d88d2b9ff069a6e/bertil.hatt},
date-added = {2008-01-10 09:25:21 +0100},
date-modified = {2008-03-13 14:37:51 +0100},
description = {March 2008},
interhash = {964012de4b4bbe3375d51bc8b9a84f51},
intrahash = {cb6aba879628167d1d88d2b9ff069a6e},
journal = {arXiv},
keywords = {imported},
local-url = {file://localhost/Users/bertilhatt/Documents/Papers/Golder/2006/Golder%202006%20arXiv.pdf},
month = Jan,
pmid = {14752718741733326996related:lEBDSIgvvMwJ},
rating = {0},
read = {Yes},
timestamp = {2008-03-13T16:34:33.000+0100},
title = {Rhythms of social interaction: messaging within a massive online network},
uri = {papers://C3B117CD-23C4-4854-9426-AC96AFB113DA/Paper/p2615},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/cs.CY/0611137},
year = 2006
}