Dynamics of Algorithmic Content Amplification on TikTok
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Mar 26, 2025
Abstract
Intelligent algorithms increasingly shape the content we encounter and engage
with online. TikTok's For You feed exemplifies extreme algorithm-driven
curation, tailoring the stream of video content almost exclusively based on
users' explicit and implicit interactions with the platform. Despite growing
attention, the dynamics of content amplification on TikTok remain largely
unquantified. How quickly, and to what extent, does TikTok's algorithm amplify
content aligned with users' interests? To address these questions, we conduct a
sock-puppet audit, deploying bots with different interests to engage with
TikTok's "For You" feed. Our findings reveal that content aligned with the
bots' interests undergoes strong amplification, with rapid reinforcement
typically occurring within the first 200 videos watched. While amplification is
consistently observed across all interests, its intensity varies by interest,
indicating the emergence of topic-specific biases. Time series analyses and
Markov models uncover distinct phases of recommendation dynamics, including
persistent content reinforcement and a gradual decline in content diversity
over time. Although TikTok's algorithm preserves some content diversity, we
find a strong negative correlation between amplification and exploration: as
the amplification of interest-aligned content increases, engagement with unseen
hashtags declines. These findings contribute to discussions on
socio-algorithmic feedback loops in the digital age and the trade-offs between
personalization and content diversity.