Abstract

Social media has become a modern arena for human life, with billions of daily users worldwide. The intense popularity of social media is often attributed to a psychological need for social rewards (likes), portraying the online world as a Skinner Box for the modern human. Yet despite such portrayals, empirical evidence for social media engagement as reward-based behavior remains scant. Here, we apply a computational approach to directly test whether reward learning mechanisms contribute to social media behavior. We analyze over one million posts from over 4000 individuals on multiple social media platforms, using computational models based on reinforcement learning theory. Our results consistently show that human behavior on social media conforms qualitatively and quantitatively to the principles of reward learning. Specifically, social media users spaced their posts to maximize the average rate of accrued social rewards, in a manner subject to both the effort cost of posting and the opportunity cost of inaction. Results further reveal meaningful individual difference profiles in social reward learning on social media. Finally, an online experiment (n = 176), mimicking key aspects of social media, verifies that social rewards causally influence behavior as posited by our computational account. Together, these findings support a reward learning account of social media engagement and offer new insights into this emergent mode of modern human behavior.

Highlights

  • Social media has become a modern arena for human life, with billions of daily users worldwide

  • We tested our hypothesis that online social behavior, in the form of posts, follows principles of reward learning theory in four independent social media datasets with computational modeling

  • These datasets came from four distinct social media platforms, where people post pictures and, in response, receive social reward in the forms of “likes.” In Study 1 (NUsers = 2,039), we tested our hypothesis in a large dataset of Instagram posts[30]

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Summary

Introduction

Social media has become a modern arena for human life, with billions of daily users worldwide. In another study, receiving more replies for a post on a specific social media discussion forum predicted a subsequent increase in the time spent on that forum relative to others, consistent with learning theory[26]. It remains unclear whether basic mechanisms of reward learning can help explain actual behavior on social media

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