Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers

In social media, a content provider can initiate outgoingties to other providers to promote their content, thus inviting reciprocalpromotion. We investigate how the reciprocation benefit for the initiatingprovider is affected by homophily and triadic closure, the two major mechanismsof tie formation...

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Main Authors: SONG, tingting, TANG, Qian, HUANG, Jinghua
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2019
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/4827
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-58302020-01-16T09:18:03Z Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers SONG, tingting TANG, Qian HUANG, Jinghua In social media, a content provider can initiate outgoingties to other providers to promote their content, thus inviting reciprocalpromotion. We investigate how the reciprocation benefit for the initiatingprovider is affected by homophily and triadic closure, the two major mechanismsof tie formation. Specifically, we examine how the increase in subscribers and viewershipof the initiating provider’s content attributable to the responding providers’reciprocation is moderated by common ties and content similarity between thetwo linked providers. Using a panel data on 27,356 YouTube video providers, wespecify a switching regression model toestimate the influence of content similarity and common ties on reciprocationimpact while correcting for their influence on reciprocation probability. Confirmingthat reciprocation is generally beneficial for the initiator, we find thatalthough content similarity and common ties increase reciprocation probability,they reduce the reciprocation benefit for the initiator in terms of subscribergrowth. We also find a positive interaction effect between content similarityand common ties on reciprocation impact, reducing their individual effects.Combining their respective influence on reciprocation probability and benefit,we further examine how content similarity and common ties affect the expectedbenefit for the initiator and derive practical implications for contentproviders and social media platforms. 2019-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/4827 info:doi/10.1287/isre.2019.0838 Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Social networking user-generated content reciprocation switching regression model homophily triadic closure Databases and Information Systems Social Media
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Social networking
user-generated content
reciprocation
switching regression model
homophily
triadic closure
Databases and Information Systems
Social Media
spellingShingle Social networking
user-generated content
reciprocation
switching regression model
homophily
triadic closure
Databases and Information Systems
Social Media
SONG, tingting
TANG, Qian
HUANG, Jinghua
Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
description In social media, a content provider can initiate outgoingties to other providers to promote their content, thus inviting reciprocalpromotion. We investigate how the reciprocation benefit for the initiatingprovider is affected by homophily and triadic closure, the two major mechanismsof tie formation. Specifically, we examine how the increase in subscribers and viewershipof the initiating provider’s content attributable to the responding providers’reciprocation is moderated by common ties and content similarity between thetwo linked providers. Using a panel data on 27,356 YouTube video providers, wespecify a switching regression model toestimate the influence of content similarity and common ties on reciprocationimpact while correcting for their influence on reciprocation probability. Confirmingthat reciprocation is generally beneficial for the initiator, we find thatalthough content similarity and common ties increase reciprocation probability,they reduce the reciprocation benefit for the initiator in terms of subscribergrowth. We also find a positive interaction effect between content similarityand common ties on reciprocation impact, reducing their individual effects.Combining their respective influence on reciprocation probability and benefit,we further examine how content similarity and common ties affect the expectedbenefit for the initiator and derive practical implications for contentproviders and social media platforms.
format text
author SONG, tingting
TANG, Qian
HUANG, Jinghua
author_facet SONG, tingting
TANG, Qian
HUANG, Jinghua
author_sort SONG, tingting
title Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
title_short Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
title_full Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
title_fullStr Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
title_full_unstemmed Triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: An empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
title_sort triadic closure, homophily, and reciprocation: an empirical investigation of social ties between content providers
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2019
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/4827
_version_ 1770575056256106496