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The Diffusion of Microfinance

TLDR
This article examined how participation in a micro-finance program diffuses through social networks and found that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants.
Abstract
We examine how participation in a microfinance program diffuses through social networks. We collected detailed demographic and social network data in 43 villages in South India before microfinance was introduced in those villages and then tracked eventual participation. We exploit exogenous variation in the importance (in a network sense) of the people who were first informed about the program, "the injection points". Microfinance participation is higher when the injection points have higher eigenvector centrality. We estimate structural models of diffusion that allow us to (i) determine the relative roles of basic information transmission versus other forms of peer influence, and (ii) distinguish information passing by participants and non-participants. We find that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants, but that information passing by non-participants is still substantial and significant, accounting for roughly a third of informedness and participation. We also find that, conditioned on being informed, an individual's decision is not significantly affected by the participation of her acquaintances.

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Dissertation

Dynamic Logics of Networks: Information Flow and the Spread of Opinion

TL;DR: Overall, this thesis applies tools from current logics of information update and agency to social network analysis and opinion flow over time, offering both tools for detailed modeling of specific scenarios and a better understanding of the general laws of reasoning that underlie information and diffusion dynamics in social settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Viral Altruism? Charitable Giving and Social Contagion in Online Networks

TL;DR: This article used individual-level longitudinal data and experimental data from a social-media application that facilitates donations while broadcasting donors' activities to their contacts, finding that broadcasting is positively associated with donations, although some individuals appear to opportunistically broadcast a pledge, and then delete it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Targets of drugs are generally, and targets of drugs having side effects are specifically good spreaders of human interactome perturbations

TL;DR: The results showed that in general, drug targets were better spreaders of perturbations than non-target proteins, and in particular, targets of drugs with side effects were also better spreades than targets of drug having no reported side effects in human protein-protein interaction networks.
Posted Content

Impact and dynamics of hate and counter speech online.

TL;DR: This work reports on the dynamic interactions of hate and counter speech over time and provides insights into whether, as in `classic' bullying situations, organized efforts are more effective than independent individuals in steering online discourse.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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