Classroom Companion: Business
· Estimating the Value of Networks 140 9
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Introduction to Digital Economics
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- Box 9.4 Derivation of Odlyzko-Tilly’s Law
9.6 · Estimating the Value of Networks
140 9 be calculated as V(n) = 5.7 × 10 −9 × n 2 ~ n 2 . However, this conclusion depends on how value is defined and how the number of users is counted. The network effect (or feedback term) of Metcalfe’s law is F Metcalfe (n)~n. This is the most commonly used value for network effects in economic research. The value was, in fact, used long before Metcalfe suggested it in 1980. This feedback value is the basis for the diffusion model of Frank Bass from 1969 (see 7 Chap. 18 ). Andrew Odlyzko and his coworkers have argued that Metcalfe’s law is incor- rect—in particular, concerning social media networks—since Metcalfe’s law assumes that all possible transactions have equal value. In a large population, Metcalfe’s law gives an overestimation of the value of the network since each indi- vidual will only interact with a small number of other individuals, and not all inter- actions between them will be equally strong. Based on this argument, Odlyzko and Tilly proposed the alternative law: V n n n O T ~ ln . This law is called Odlyzko-Tilly’s law. The network effect is now reduced to F O − T (n) ~ ln n. Box 9.4 Derivation of Odlyzko-Tilly’s Law Odlyzko-Tilly’s law is derived apply- ing Zipf ’s principle to the frequency of interactions an individual has with other individuals. Zipf ’s principle is an empirical law based on the obser- vation that several sequences in nature and society (e.g., frequency of words, size of cities, and length of rivers) fol- low a rank distribution (called a “Pareto distribution” in statistics) in which the most frequent or largest item is twice as frequent or large as the second item in the sequence, three times as frequent or large as the third item, and so on. By applying this ranking principle on interactions between people, the total number of transactions T between one individual and all other individuals is: T c c c c n c n n 2 3 ~ ln ~ ln . Applying Zipf’s ranking principle, the assumption is that an individual has c transactions with the person who is clos- est to him, only half as many with the next closest person, one-third as many with the third closest, and so on. The value of the network is then V O − T (n) = nT~n ln n. Another way to derive Odlyzko- Tilly’s law is based on the connectivity of random graphs. First, assume that individuals are nodes in a random graph and that the interactions between the individuals are the links in the graph; that is, two individuals interacting with each other are connected by a link, while there is no link between two individuals who are not interacting with each other. The simplest random graph is the Erdös- Rényi (ER) graph. In ER graphs, the probability, p, that a link exists between any two nodes is the same for all pairs of nodes in the network. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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