English

A Poissonian explanation for heavy-tails in e-mail communication

Physics and Society 2009-01-08 v1 Computers and Society Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability

Abstract

Patterns of deliberate human activity and behavior are of utmost importance in areas as diverse as disease spread, resource allocation, and emergency response. Because of its widespread availability and use, e-mail correspondence provides an attractive proxy for studying human activity. Recently, it was reported that the probability density for the inter-event time τ\tau between consecutively sent e-mails decays asymptotically as τα\tau^{-\alpha}, with α1\alpha \approx 1. The slower than exponential decay of the inter-event time distribution suggests that deliberate human activity is inherently non-Poissonian. Here, we demonstrate that the approximate power-law scaling of the inter-event time distribution is a consequence of circadian and weekly cycles of human activity. We propose a cascading non-homogeneous Poisson process which explicitly integrates these periodic patterns in activity with an individual's tendency to continue participating in an activity. Using standard statistical techniques, we show that our model is consistent with the empirical data. Our findings may also provide insight into the origins of heavy-tailed distributions in other complex systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.0585,
  title  = {A Poissonian explanation for heavy-tails in e-mail communication},
  author = {R. Dean Malmgren and Daniel B. Stouffer and Adilson E. Motter and Luis A. N. Amaral},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.0585},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

9 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:57:49.409Z