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	<title>Diego &#8211; Noshir Contractor</title>
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		<title>How algorithmic popularity bias hinders or promotes quality</title>
		<link>https://nosh.northwestern.edu/how-algorithmic-popularity-bias-hinders-or-promotes-quality/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Diego]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Nov 2018 19:07:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Networks in the News]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sonic.northwestern.edu/?p=15745</guid>

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<p>By&#160;Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia, Azadeh Nematzadeh, Filippo Menczer &#38; Alessandro Flammini</p>
<p>Algorithms that favor popular items are used to help us select among many choices, from top-ranked search engine results to highly-cited scientific papers. The goal of these algorithms is to identify high-quality items such as reliable news, credible information sources, and important discoveries&#8211;in short, high-quality content should rank at the top.</p></div></div>&#8230; <a href="http://sonic.northwestern.edu/how-algorithmic-popularity-bias-hinders-or-promotes-quality/">Read the rest</a></section>]]></description>
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<p>By Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia, Azadeh Nematzadeh, Filippo Menczer &amp; Alessandro Flammini</p>
<p>Algorithms that favor popular items are used to help us select among many choices, from top-ranked search engine results to highly-cited scientific papers. The goal of these algorithms is to identify high-quality items such as reliable news, credible information sources, and important discoveries–in short, high-quality content should rank at the top. Prior work has shown that choosing what is popular may amplify random fluctuations and lead to sub-optimal rankings. Nonetheless, it is often assumed that recommending what is popular will help high-quality content “bubble up” in practice. Here we identify the conditions in which popularity may be a viable proxy for quality content by studying a simple model of a cultural market endowed with an intrinsic notion of quality. A parameter representing the cognitive cost of exploration controls the trade-off between quality and popularity. Below and above a critical exploration cost, popularity bias is more likely to hinder quality. But we find a narrow intermediate regime of user attention where an optimal balance exists: choosing what is popular can help promote high-quality items to the top. These findings clarify the effects of algorithmic popularity bias on quality outcomes, and may inform the design of more principled mechanisms for techno-social cultural markets.</p>
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<div id="Sec1-section" class="serif article-section js-article-section cleared clear">Article published at Nature Communications</div>
<div>https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-34203-2</div>
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