We live in a global village where electronic communication has eliminated the geographical barriers of information exchange. The road is now open to worldwide convergence of information interests, shared values and understanding. Nevertheless, interests still vary between countries around the world. This raises important questions about what today’s world map of information interests actually looks like and what factors cause the barriers of information exchange between countries. To quantitatively construct a world map of information interests, we devise a scalable statistical model that identifies countries with similar information interests and measures the countries’ bilateral similarities. From the similarities we connect countries in a global network and find that countries can be mapped into 18 clusters with similar information interests. Through regression we find that language and religion best explain the strength of the bilateral ties and formation of clusters. Our findings provide a quantitative basis for further studies to better understand the complex interplay between shared interests and conflict on a global scale. The methodology can also be extended to track changes over time and capture important trends in global information exchange.
CITATION STYLE
Karimi, F., Bohlin, L., Samoilenko, A., Rosvall, M., & Lancichinetti, A. (2015). Mapping bilateral information interests using the activity of Wikipedia editors. Palgrave Communications, 1. https://doi.org/10.1057/palcomms.2015.41
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.