Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

World Is Shrinking, We Are Just 3.5 Degrees Apart: Facebook

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Feb, 2016 12:54 PM
    You must have heard about the famous “six degrees of separation” theory that everyone on the planet is connected to everyone else by six other people. Facebook has just upended this theory, saying that world is more closely connected than you might think.
     
    After studying 1.59 billion people active on the social networking website, the team determined that the number is actually 3.57 -- meaning thereby that there is actually “three-and-a-half degrees of separation” where each person in the world is connected to every other person by an average of three-and-a-half other people.
     
    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is 3.17 degrees of separation from all Facebook users.
     
    According to researchers, our collective “degrees of separation” have shrunk over the past five years.
     
    In 2011, researchers at Cornell University, the Università degli Studi di Milano and Facebook computed the average across the 721 million people using the website.
     
     
    “They and found that it was 3.74. Now, with twice as many people using the site, we've grown more interconnected, thus shortening the distance between any two people in the world,” Facebook said in a post.
     
    “Calculating this number across billions of people and hundreds of billions of friendship connections is challenging; we use statistical techniques described below to precisely estimate distance based on de-identified, aggregate data,” the team wrote.
     
    Imagine a person with 100 friends. If each of his friends also has 100 friends, then the number of friends-of-friends will be 10,000.
     
    If each of those friends-of-friends also has 100 friends then the number of friends-of-friends-of-friends will be 1,000,000.
     
    “Some of those friends may overlap, so we need to filter down to the unique connections. Rather than calculate it exactly, we relied on statistical algorithms to estimate distances with great accuracy, basically finding the approximate number of people within 1, 2, 3 (and so on) hops away from a source,” the researchers noted.
     
     
    “The average distance we observe is 4.57, corresponding to 3.57 intermediaries or "degrees of separation." Within the US, people are connected to each other by an average of 3.46 degrees,” the post added.
     
    The “six degrees of separation” theory was coined by the Hungarian playwright Frigyes Karinthy in 1929.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter
    Genuine explosive materials are traditionally used to train dogs to detect explosives and to test their performance later on....

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting
    VICTORIA — A First Nations elder told a National Energy Board hearing that Kinder Morgan's proposed pipeline expansion threatens traditional hunting and food sources and the archeological sites of his people.

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand
    It might seem as though everyone has an iPhone or Galaxy smartphone. But many customers are eschewing the best cameras and screens — and their top-end price tags — and choosing models that can get the job done at less than a third of the cost.

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt
    Spanish archaeologists have discovered about 4,000 years old female mummy wearing rare jewellery in Egypt....

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt

    How a change in pitch alters power equations

    How a change in pitch alters power equations
    Altering the pitch of your voice can fundamentally change the way you speak, says a study, suggesting that others are then able to pick up on these vocal cues...

    How a change in pitch alters power equations

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master
    Your dog loves you as much as you love it, researchers confirmed in a study that looked inside the brain of our canine friends using imaging technology....

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master