Social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter provide highly granular time-stamped data about the interactions and communications between people and provide us unprecedented opportunities for empirically testing theory about information flow in social networks. Using publicly available data from Twitter’s free API (Application Program Interface), we track the adoption of popular hashtags in Nigeria during 2014. These hashtags reference online marketing campaigns, major news stories, and events and issues specific to Nigeria, including reactions to the kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls in Northeastern Nigeria by the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram. We find that hashtags related to Nigerian sociopolitical issues, including the #bringbackourgirls hashtag, which was associated with protests against the Nigerian government’s response to the kidnapping, are more likely to be adopted among densely connected users with multiple network neighbors who have also adopted the hashtag, compared to mainstream news hashtags. This association between adoption threshold and local network structure is consistent with theory about the spread of complex contagions, a type of social contagion which requires social reinforcement from multiple adopting neighbors. Theory also predicts the need for a critical mass of adopters before the contagion can become viral. We illustrate this with the #bringbackourgirls hashtag by identifying the point at which the local social movement transforms into a more widespread phenomenon. We also show that these results are robust across both the follow and reply/mention/retweet networks on Twitter. Our analysis involves data mining records of hashtag adoption and of the social connections between adopters.
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