Mixed Membership Models for Exploring User Roles in Online Fora

Discussion boards are a form of social media which allow users to discuss topics and exchange information in a complex manner, in a number of different settings. As the popularity of such message boards has increased, communities of users have emerged, and several prominent types of social role have been identified, such as Question Answerer, Celebrity, Discussion Person and Topic Initiator. Recent studies have noted the structural similarity of the egocentric network of users assigned the same role by qualitative criteria. In this paper a methodology is developed with which to cluster together users with similar ego-centric network structures. This is achieved using a mixed membership formulation which allows for the fact that different groups of users may have characteristics in common. The method is then applied to data taken from boards.ie, a medium sized message boards website. Prominent clusters of users are identified and discussed, and illustrative examples of user behaviour provided. The type of interaction, both locally and globally, taking place within forums is examined.

[1]  Andrew McCallum,et al.  Topic and Role Discovery in Social Networks , 2005, IJCAI.

[2]  Elizabeth M. Daly,et al.  Decomposing Discussion Forums and Boards Using User Roles , 2010, ICWSM.

[3]  Stanley Wasserman,et al.  Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications , 1994, Structural analysis in the social sciences.

[4]  David M. Blei,et al.  Relational Topic Models for Document Networks , 2009, AISTATS.

[5]  Marc A. Smith,et al.  A Conceptual and Operational Definition of 'Social Role' in Online Community , 2009 .

[6]  Colin Campbell,et al.  The Latent Process Decomposition of cDNA Microarray Data Sets , 2005, TCBB.

[7]  Danyel Fisher,et al.  You Are Who You Talk To: Detecting Roles in Usenet Newsgroups , 2006, Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'06).

[8]  Scott A. Golder,et al.  SOCIAL ROLES IN ELECTRONIC COMMUNITIES , 2004 .

[9]  Michael I. Jordan,et al.  Latent Dirichlet Allocation , 2001, J. Mach. Learn. Res..

[10]  M. Abramowitz,et al.  Handbook of Mathematical Functions With Formulas, Graphs and Mathematical Tables (National Bureau of Standards Applied Mathematics Series No. 55) , 1965 .

[11]  Philip S. Yu,et al.  Identifying the influential bloggers in a community , 2008, WSDM '08.

[12]  Kathryn B. Laskey,et al.  Stochastic blockmodels: First steps , 1983 .

[13]  Dan Cosley,et al.  Finding social roles in Wikipedia , 2011, iConference.

[14]  H. White,et al.  STRUCTURAL EQUIVALENCE OF INDIVIDUALS IN SOCIAL NETWORKS , 1977 .

[15]  S. Fienberg,et al.  DESCRIBING DISABILITY THROUGH INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL MIXTURE MODELS FOR MULTIVARIATE BINARY DATA. , 2007, The annals of applied statistics.