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HPSHELTON

Programming, Privacy, Politics, Photography

Jul 7, 2015

The Social-Network Illusion That Tricks Your Mind →

This is the majority illusion — the local impression that a specific attribute is common when the global truth is entirely different.

The reason isn't hard to see. The majority illusion occurs when the most popular nodes are colored. Because these link to the greatest number of other nodes, they skew the view from the ground, as it were. That's why this illusion is so closely linked to the friendship paradox.

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H. Parker Shelton

I'm just an ordinary thirty-something who's had some extraordinary opportunities. I graduated from Johns Hopkins University, work for Microsoft in Silicon Valley, code websites and applications, take the occasional photograph, and keep a constant eye on current events, politics, and technology. This blog is the best of what catches that eye.

 
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