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Abstract
Human cognitive abilities are limited resources. Today, in the age of cheap information—cheap to produce, to manipulate, to disseminate—this cognitive bottleneck translates into hypercompetition for rewarding outcomes among actors. These incentives push actors to mutualistically interact with specific memes, seeking the virality of their messages. In turn, memes’ chances to persist and spread are subject to changes in the communication environment. In spite of all this complexity, here we show that the underlying architecture of empirical actor-meme information ecosystems evolves into recurring emergent patterns. We then propose an ecology-inspired modelling framework, bringing to light the precise mechanisms causing the observed flexible structural reorganisation. The model predicts—and the data confirm—that users’ struggle for visibility induces a re-equilibration of the network’s mesoscale towards self-similar nested arrangements. Our final microscale insights suggest that flexibility at the structural level is not mirrored at the dynamical one.
Human perceptual and cognitive abilities are limited resources and consequently cheaply available information translates into hypercompetition for rewarding outcomes. Here the authors show, with empirical analysis and an ecological model, that actors-memes ecosystems evolve towards a narrow set of emergent, natural network patterns.
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1 Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3), Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain (GRID:grid.36083.3e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2171 6620)
2 Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3), Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain (GRID:grid.36083.3e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2171 6620); University of Zurich, URPP Social Networks, Zurich, Switzerland (GRID:grid.7400.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 1937 0650)
3 IFISC, Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Physics and Complex Systems (CSIC-UIB), Palma de Mallorca, Spain (GRID:grid.507629.f) (ISNI:0000 0004 1768 3290)
4 Università di Padova, Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia G. Galilei, Padova, Italy (GRID:grid.5608.b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1757 3470); Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, LPTMS, Orsay, France (GRID:grid.503330.6) (ISNI:0000 0004 0366 8268)
5 Università di Padova, Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia G. Galilei, Padova, Italy (GRID:grid.5608.b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1757 3470)