Significance Increasing empirical evidence in diverse social and ecological systems has shown that indirect interactions play a pivotal role in shaping systems’ dynamical behavior. Our empirical study on collaboration networks… Click to show full abstract
Significance Increasing empirical evidence in diverse social and ecological systems has shown that indirect interactions play a pivotal role in shaping systems’ dynamical behavior. Our empirical study on collaboration networks of scientists further reveals that an indirect effect can dominate over direct influence in behavioral spreading. However, almost all models in existence focus on direct interactions, and the general impact of indirect interactions has not been studied. We propose a new percolation process, termed induced percolation, to characterize indirect interactions and find that indirect interactions raise a plethora of new phenomena, including the wide range of possible phase transitions. Such an indirect mechanism leads to very different spreading outcomes from that of direct influences.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.