腦瞳憫

31 October 2025

Sociologists from 腦瞳憫 analyse Spotify data to learn about the spreading of music and cultural change more generally.

A woman looking at her mobilephone.

Social influence on can do more than speed up hits. Under the right conditions it can decouple what people listen to from what they initially preferred. The paper distinguishes two kinds of influence: narrow influence, where people are exposed only to content aligned with their preferences, and wide influence that exposes people to content outside their usual repertoires. To produce collective outcomes that are unpredictable from initial preferences—and bring about cultural change—mere strength of influence is not enough.

Over a million users

Looking at more than a million Spotify users, the study shows that when wide influence is operative people are exposed and susceptible to taste-transcending choices from peers. Then surprising collective outcomes can emerge.

For this to happen, the study shows that partial taste overlap between the senders and the recipients of social influence is crucial. Too little similarity in music taste means low susceptibility; too much similarity no novelty. Partial overlap helps balance exposure to novelty and willingness to adopt it. The empirical analysis shows this trade-off: exposures from more similar peers are more influential while less similar peers tend to expose listeners to more novel artists.

Peer-to-peer influence

The research combines three strands of analysis on Spotify data containing publicly shared user playlists, follower ties, and adoption events: First, the authors employ topic modelling, a widely used technique from natural language processing, to map artists to musical genres and measure users’ musical tastes. Based on these measures, second, they conduct high-dimensional statistical matching to estimate peer-to-peer influence while controlling for taste and selection effects. This is no easy task, as in observational data influence and homophily, humans’ tendency to connect to and follow others with similar interests and tastes, is intertwined. Finally, the study uses agent-based computer simulations to examine how the micro-level influence mechanism found empirically scales up to macro outcomes. Simulated macro dynamics demonstrate that when networks contain partially overlapping taste connections, unexpected and unpredictable market outcomes emerge. Networks with only identical or only dissimilar ties do not produce the same decoupling.

Diversity

The results refine our understanding of cultural diffusion: success and inequality in cultural markets are not solely driven by intrinsic quality or by simple popularity cascades. Instead, network structure and the width of influence—how peers expose and make novel options acceptable—also shape whether previously unlikely items can become major hits. This has implications for industry strategy and theories of social contagion more broadly. Knowledge about social-influence mechanisms can also inform the design of algorithmic newsfeeds on social media platforms that suffer from one-sided views and the spreading of misinformation: exposing users to content that is different from what they initially believed in, but maintains partial ideological overlap—sufficiently close to ensure trust and sufficiently distant to broaden exposure—can help spread more politically diverse, and hopefully, less biased news.

Read more

Arvidsson, Martin, Peter Hedstr繹m, Marc Keuschnigg. 2025. Sociological Science 12: 715-742.

Contact

Organisation

Latest news from LiU

Two women standing in front of two computer monitors.

The making of future security experts

The cybersecurity lab on Campus Valla is a specially designed environment where students can practise ethical hacking as well as protection against attackers.

En man med skalligt huvud och svart skjorta.

Space psychologist no room for delay

He began studying for a masters degree in engineering but dropped out.Then he enrolled on the psychology programme. Yet something still felt wrong. Now he is studying both at the same time and feels he has finally found his place.

En kvinna st疇r i sn繹n framf繹r ett batterilager.

The battle for power who has the right to our electricity?

Wind farms rising like the Eiffel Tower, data centres consuming as much power as entire regions and municipalities feeling like pawns in a global game. The large-scale investments  are creating conflict:  who has priority access to our electricity?