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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:CBB Seminar | Social Seminar ~ Dean Eckles, MIT Sloan
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SUMMARY:CBB Seminar | Social Seminar ~ Dean Eckles, MIT Sloan
DESCRIPTION:<h5>Social Seminar ~</h5><h5><a href="https://mitsloan.mit.edu/faculty/directory/dean-eckles">Dean Eckles</a>, Professor of Management<span> and Professor of Marketing, MIT Sloan</span></h5><h5><strong>Title: </strong>Long&nbsp;ties&nbsp;and tendencies toward&nbsp;triadic&nbsp;closure</h5><h6>Empirical&nbsp;social&nbsp;networks are characterized by a high degree of&nbsp;triadic&nbsp;closure (i.e. transitivity, clustering), whereby network neighbors of the same individual are also likely to be directly connected. It is unknown to what degree this results from dispositions to form such relationships (i.e. to close open triangles) per se or whether it reflects other processes, such as homophily and more opportunities for exposure. Here, using a field experiment on&nbsp;social&nbsp;media, we randomize the existing network structure that a user faces when followed by a target account that we control, and we examine whether they reciprocate this&nbsp;tie&nbsp;formation. Being randomly assigned to have an existing&nbsp;tie&nbsp;to an account that follows the target user increases&nbsp;tie&nbsp;formation by 35%. Through the use of multiple control conditions in which the relevant&nbsp;tie&nbsp;is absent (never existent or removed), we are able to attribute this effect specifically to a small variation in the stimulus that indicates the presence (or absence) of a potential mutual follower. Theory suggests that&nbsp;triadic&nbsp;closure should be especially likely in open triads of strong&nbsp;ties, and we find evidence of larger effects when the subject has interacted more with the existing follower. These results indicate a substantial role for dispositions toward&nbsp;triadic&nbsp;closure, which platforms and others can choose to leverage in encouraging&nbsp;tie&nbsp;formation, with implications for network structure and the diffusion of information in online networks. I contextualize these results in the broader context of the value of&nbsp;long&nbsp;ties&nbsp;— or&nbsp;ties&nbsp;not part of closed triads.</h6><h6><em><span>Due to the ongoing construction in WJH Plaza, we will meet at </span></em><a href="https://essroombook.fas.harvard.edu/room.php?rm=rm0307"><em><span>CGIS South S010 Tsai Auditorium</span></em></a><em><span>.</span></em></h6>
LOCATION:CGIS South S010 Tsai Auditorium - Concourse Level
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20251023T160000Z
DTEND:20251023T171500Z
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