A
social network is a social structure made up of individuals (or organizations) called "nodes", which are tied (connected)
by one or more specific types of interdependency, such as friendship,kinship, common interest, financial exchange,
dislike, sexual relationships, or relationships of beliefs, knowledge or prestige.
Social network analysis views social relationships in terms ofnetwork theory consisting of nodes and ties (also
called edges,links, or connections). Nodes are the individual actors within the networks, and ties are the relationships
between the actors. The resulting graph-based structures are often very complex. There can be many kinds of ties between
the nodes. Research in a number of academic fields has shown that social networks operate on many levels, from families
up to the level of nations, and play a critical role in determining the way problems are solved, organizations are run, and the
degree to which individuals succeed in achieving their goals.
In its simplest form, a social network is a map of specified ties, such as friendship, between the nodes being studied. The
nodes to which an individual is thus connected are the social contacts of that individual. The network can also be used to
measure social capital – the value that an individual gets from the social network. These concepts are often displayed in a
social network diagram, where nodes are the points and ties are the lines.
Social network analysis
An example of a social network diagram. The node with the highest betweenness centrality is marked in yellow.
Social network analysis (related to network theory) has emerged as a key technique in modern sociology. It has also gained
a significant following in anthropology, biology,communication studies, economics,geography, information
science,organizational studies, social psychology, and sociolinguistics, and has become a popular topic of speculation and
study.
People have used the idea of "social network" loosely for over a century to connote complex sets of relationships between
members of social systems at all scales, from interpersonal to international. In 1954, J. A. Barnes started using the term
systematically to denote patterns of ties, encompassing concepts traditionally used by the public and those used by social
scientists: bounded groups (e.g., tribes, families) and social categories (e.g., gender, ethnicity). Scholars such as S.D.
Berkowitz, Stephen Borgatti, Ronald Burt, Kathleen Carley, Martin Everett, Katherine Faust, Linton Freeman, Mark
Granovetter, David Knoke, David Krackhardt, Peter Marsden, Nicholas Mullins, Anatol Rapoport, Stanley Wasserman, Barry
Wellman,Douglas R. White, and Harrison White expanded the use of systematic social network analysis.[1]
Social network analysis has now moved from being a suggestive metaphor to an analytic approach to a paradigm, with its
own theoretical statements, methods, social network analysis software, and researchers. Analysts reason from whole to
part; from structure to relation to individual; from behavior to attitude. They typically either study whole networks (also known
as complete networks), all of the ties containing specified relations in a defined population, or personal networks (also
known asegocentric networks), the ties that specified people have, such as their "personal communities".[2] In the latter case,
the ties are said to go from egos, who are the focal actors who are being analyzed, to their alters. The distinction between
whole/complete networks and personal/egocentric networks has depended largely on how analysts were able to gather
data. That is, for groups such as companies, schools, or membership societies, the analyst was expected to have complete
information about who was in the network, all participants being both potential egos and alters. Personal/egocentric studies
were typically conducted when identities of egos were known, but not their alters. These studies rely on the egos to provide
information about the identities of alters and there is no expectation that the various egos or sets of alters will be tied to each
other. A snowball network refers to the idea that the alters identified in an egocentric survey then become egos themselves
and are able in turn to nominate additional alters. While there are severe logistic limits to conducting snowball network
studies, a method for examining hybrid networks has recently been developed in which egos in complete networks can
nominate alters otherwise not listed who are then available for all subsequent egos to see.[3] The hybrid network may be
valuable for examining whole/complete networks that are expected to include important players beyond those who are
formally identified. For example, employees of a company often work with non-company consultants who may be part of a
network that cannot fully be defined prior to data collection.
Several analytic tendencies distinguish social network analysis:[4]
There is no assumption that groups are the building blocks of society: the approach is open to studying less-
bounded social systems, from nonlocal communities to links among websites.
Rather than treating individuals (persons, organizations, states) as discrete units of analysis, it focuses on how the
structure of ties affects individuals and their relationships.
In contrast to analyses that assume that socialization into norms determines behavior, network analysis looks to
see the extent to which the structure and composition of ties affect norms.
The shape of a social network helps determine a network's usefulness to its individuals. Smaller, tighter
networks can be less useful to their members than networks with lots of loose connections (weak ties) to
individuals outside the main network. More open networks, with many weak ties and social connections,
are more likely to introduce new ideas and opportunities to their members than closed networks with
many redundant ties. In other words, a group of friends who only do things with each other already share
the same knowledge and opportunities. A group of individuals with connections to other social worlds is
likely to have access to a wider range of information. It is better for individual success to have
connections to a variety of networks rather than many connections within a single network. Similarly,
individuals can exercise influence or act as brokers within their social networks by bridging two networks
that are not directly linked (called filling structural holes).[5]
The power of social network analysis stems from its difference from traditional social scientific studies,
which assume that it is the attributes of individual actors—whether they are friendly or unfriendly, smart
or dumb, etc.—that matter. Social network analysis produces an alternate view, where the attributes of
individuals are less important than their relationships and ties with other actors within the network. This
approach has turned out to be useful for explaining many real-world phenomena, but leaves less room
for individual agency, the ability for individuals to influence their success, because so much of it rests
within the structure of their network.
Social networks have also been used to examine how organizations interact with each other,
characterizing the many informal connections that link executives together, as well as associations and
connections between individual employees at different organizations. For example, power within
organizations often comes more from the degree to which an individual within a network is at the center
of many relationships than actual job title. Social networks also play a key role in hiring, in business
success, and in job performance. Networks provide ways for companies to gather information, deter
competition, and collude in setting prices or policies.[6]
History of social network analysis
A summary of the progress of social networks and social network analysis has been written by Linton
Freeman.[7]
Precursors of social networks in the late 1800s include Émile Durkheim and Ferdinand Tönnies. Tönnies
argued that social groups can exist as personal and direct social ties that either link individuals who share
values and belief (gemeinschaft) or impersonal, formal, and instrumental social links (gesellschaft).
Durkheim gave a non-individualistic explanation of social facts arguing that social phenomena arise when
interacting individuals constitute a reality that can no longer be accounted for in terms of the properties of
individual actors. He distinguished between a traditional society – "mechanical solidarity" – which prevails
if individual differences are minimized, and the modern society – "organic solidarity" – that develops out
of cooperation between differentiated individuals with independent roles.
Georg Simmel, writing at the turn of the twentieth century, was the first scholar to think directly in social
network terms. His essays pointed to the nature of network size on interaction and to the likelihood of
interaction in ramified, loosely-knit networks rather than groups (Simmel, 1908/1971).
After a hiatus in the first decades of the twentieth century, three main traditions in social networks
appeared. In the 1930s, J.L. Moreno pioneered the systematic recording and analysis of social
interaction in small groups, especially classrooms and work groups (sociometry), while a Harvardgroup
led by W. Lloyd Warner and Elton Mayo explored interpersonal relations at work. In 1940, A.R.Radcliffe-
Brown's presidential address to British anthropologists urged the systematic study of networks.
[8]
However, it took about 15 years before this call was followed-up systematically.
Social network analysis developed with the kinship studies of Elizabeth Bott in England in the 1950s and
the 1950s–1960s urbanization studies of the University of Manchester group of anthropologists (centered
around Max Gluckman and later J. Clyde Mitchell) investigating community networks in southern Africa,
India and the United Kingdom. Concomitantly, British anthropologist S.F. Nadelcodified a theory of social
structure that was influential in later network analysis.[9]
In the 1960s-1970s, a growing number of scholars worked to combine the different tracks and traditions.
One group was centered around Harrison White and his students at the Harvard University Department
of Social Relations: Ivan Chase, Bonnie Erickson, Harriet Friedmann, Mark Granovetter, Nancy Howell,
Joel Levine, Nicholas Mullins, John Padgett, Michael Schwartz and Barry Wellman. Also independently
active in the Harvard Social Relations department at the time were Charles Tilly, who focused on
networks in political and community sociology and social movements, and Stanley Milgram, who
developed the "six degrees of separation" thesis.[10] Mark Granovetter and Barry Wellman are among the
former students of White who have elaborated and popularized social network analysis.[11]
Significant independent work was also done by scholars elsewhere: University of California Irvine social
scientists interested in mathematical applications, centered around Linton Freeman, including John Boyd,
Susan Freeman, Kathryn Faust, A. Kimball Romney and Douglas White; quantitative analysts at
the University of Chicago, including Joseph Galaskiewicz, Wendy Griswold, Edward Laumann, Peter
Marsden, Martina Morris, and John Padgett; and communication scholars at Michigan State University,
including Nan Lin and Everett Rogers. A substantively-oriented University of Torontosociology group
developed in the 1970s, centered on former students of Harrison White: S.D. Berkowitz, Harriet
Friedmann, Nancy Leslie Howard, Nancy Howell, Lorne Tepperman and Barry Wellman, and also
including noted modeler and game theorist Anatol Rapoport.In terms of theory, it critiqued methodological
individualism and group-based analyses, arguing that seeing the world as social networks offered more
analytic leverage.[12]
Research
Social network analysis has been used in epidemiology to help understand how patterns of human
contact aid or inhibit the spread of diseases such as HIV in a population. The evolution of social networks
can sometimes be modeled by the use of agent based models, providing insight into the interplay
between communication rules, rumor spreading and social structure.
SNA may also be an effective tool for mass surveillance – for example the Total Information
Awarenessprogram was doing in-depth research on strategies to analyze social networks to determine
whether or not U.S. citizens were political threats.
Diffusion of innovations theory explores social networks and their role in influencing the spread of new
ideas and practices. Change agents and opinion leaders often play major roles in spurring the adoption
of innovations, although factors inherent to the innovations also play a role.
Robin Dunbar has suggested that the typical size of an egocentric network is constrained to about 150
members due to possible limits in the capacity of the human communication channel. The rule arises
from cross-cultural studies in sociology and especially anthropology of the maximum size of a village(in
modern parlance most reasonably understood as an ecovillage). It is theorized in evolutionary
psychology that the number may be some kind of limit of average human ability to recognize members
and track emotional facts about all members of a group. However, it may be due to economics and the
need to track "free riders", as it may be easier in larger groups to take advantage of the benefits of living
in a community without contributing to those benefits.
Mark Granovetter found in one study that more numerous weak ties can be important in seeking
information and innovation. Cliques have a tendency to have more homogeneous opinions as well as
share many common traits. This homophilic tendency was the reason for the members of the cliques to
be attracted together in the first place. However, being similar, each member of the clique would also
know more or less what the other members knew. To find new information or insights, members of the
clique will have to look beyond the clique to its other friends and acquaintances. This is what Granovetter
called "the strength of weak ties".
Guanxi (关系)is a central concept in Chinese society (and other East Asian cultures) that can be
summarized as the use of personal influence. It is loosely analogous to "clout" or "pull" in the West.
Guanxi can be studied from a social network approach.[13]
The small world phenomenon is the hypothesis that the chain of social acquaintances required to
connect one arbitrary person to another arbitrary person anywhere in the world is generally short. The
concept gave rise to the famous phrase six degrees of separation after a 1967 small world experimentby
psychologist Stanley Milgram. In Milgram's experiment, a sample of US individuals were asked to reach a
particular target person by passing a message along a chain of acquaintances. The average length of
successful chains turned out to be about five intermediaries or six separation steps (the majority of
chains in that study actually failed to complete). The methods (and ethics as well) of Milgram's
experiment were later questioned by an American scholar, and some further research to replicate
Milgram's findings found that the degrees of connection needed could be higher.[14]Academic researchers
continue to explore this phenomenon as Internet-based communication technology has supplemented
the phone and postal systems available during the times of Milgram. A recent electronic small world
experiment at Columbia University found that about five to seven degrees of separation are sufficient for
connecting any two people through e-mail.[15]
Collaboration graphs can be used to illustrate good and bad relationships between humans. A positive
edge between two nodes denotes a positive relationship (friendship, alliance, dating) and a negative
edge between two nodes denotes a negative relationship (hatred, anger). Signed social network graphs
can be used to predict the future evolution of the graph. In signed social networks, there is the concept of
"balanced" and "unbalanced" cycles. A balanced cycle is defined as a cycle where the product of all the
signs are positive. Balanced graphs represent a group of people who are unlikely to change their
opinions of the other people in the group. Unbalanced graphs represent a group of people who are very
likely to change their opinions of the people in their group. For example, a group of 3 people (A, B, and
C) where A and B have a positive relationship, B and C have a positive relationship, but C and A have a
negative relationship is an unbalanced cycle. This group is very likely to morph into a balanced cycle,
such as one where B only has a good relationship with A, and both A and B have a negative relationship
with C. By using the concept of balances and unbalanced cycles, the evolution ofsigned social network
graphs can be predicted.
One study has found that happiness tends to be correlated in social networks. When a person is happy,
nearby friends have a 25 percent higher chance of being happy themselves. Furthermore, people at the
center of a social network tend to become happier in the future than those at the periphery. Clusters of
happy and unhappy people were discerned within the studied networks, with a reach of three degrees of
separation: a person's happiness was associated with the level of happiness of their friends' friends'
friends.[16] (See also Emotional contagion.)
Some researchers have suggested that human social networks may have a genetic basis.[17] Using a
sample of twins from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, they found that in-degree (the
number of times a person is named as a friend), transitivity (the probability that two friends are friends
with one another), and betweenness centrality (the number of paths in the network that pass through a
given person) are all significantly heritable. Existing models of network formation cannot account for this
intrinsic node variation, so the researchers propose an alternative "Attract and Introduce" model that can
explain heritability and many other features of human social networks.[18]
Metrics (measures) in social network analysis
Betweenness
The extent to which a node lies between other nodes in the network. This measure takes into account the
connectivity of the node's neighbors, giving a higher value for nodes which bridge clusters. The measure reflects
the number of people who a person is connecting indirectly through their direct links.[19]
Bridge
An edge is said to be a bridge if deleting it would cause its endpoints to lie in different components of a graph.
Centrality
This measure gives a rough indication of the social power of a node based on how well they "connect" the network.
"Betweenness", "Closeness", and "Degree" are all measures of centrality.
Centralization
The difference between the number of links for each node divided by maximum possible sum of differences. A
centralized network will have many of its links dispersed around one or a few nodes, while a decentralized network
is one in which there is little variation between the number of links each node possesses.
Closeness
The degree an individual is near all other individuals in a network (directly or indirectly). It reflects the ability to
access information through the "grapevine" of network members. Thus, closeness is the inverse of the sum of the
shortest distances between each individual and every other person in the network. (See also: Proxemics) The
shortest path may also be known as the "geodesic distance".
Clustering coefficient
A measure of the likelihood that two associates of a node are associates themselves. A higher clustering
coefficient indicates a greater 'cliquishness'.
Cohesion
The degree to which actors are connected directly to each other by cohesive bonds. Groups are identified as
‘cliques’ if every individual is directly tied to every other individual, ‘social circles’ if there is less stringency of direct
contact, which is imprecise, or as structurally cohesive blocks if precision is wanted.[20]
Degree
The count of the number of ties to other actors in the network. See also degree (graph theory).
(Individual-level) Density
The degree a respondent's ties know one another/ proportion of ties among an individual's nominees. Network or
global-level density is the proportion of ties in a network relative to the total number possible (sparse versus dense
networks).
Flow betweenness centrality
The degree that a node contributes to sum of maximum flow between all pairs of nodes (not that node).
Eigenvector centrality
A measure of the importance of a node in a network. It assigns relative scores to all nodes in the network based on
the principle that connections to nodes having a high score contribute more to the score of the node in question.
Local bridge
An edge is a local bridge if its endpoints share no common neighbors. Unlike a bridge, a local bridge is contained
in a cycle.
Path length
The distances between pairs of nodes in the network. Average path-length is the average of these distances
between all pairs of nodes.
Prestige
In a directed graph prestige is the term used to describe a node's centrality. "Degree Prestige", "Proximity
Prestige", and "Status Prestige" are all measures of Prestige. See also degree (graph theory).
Radiality
Degree an individual’s network reaches out into the network and provides novel information and influence.
Reach
The degree any member of a network can reach other members of the network.
Se
co
nd
or
de
r
ce
ntr
ali
ty
It assigns relative scores to all nodes in the network based on the observation that important nodes see a random
walk (running on the network) "more regularly" than other nodes.[21]
Str
uct
ura
l
co
he
sio
n
The minimum number of members who, if removed from a group, would disconnect the group.[22]
Structura
l
equivale
nce
Refers to the extent to which nodes have a common set of linkages to other nodes in the system. The nodes don’t
need to have any ties to each other to be structurally equivalent.
Structural hole
Static holes that can be strategically filled by connecting one or more links to link together other points. Linked to
ideas of social capital: if you link to two people who are not linked you can control their communication.
Network
analytic
software
Main article: Social
network analysis
software
Network analytic too
are used to represe
the nodes (agents)
and edges
(relationships) in a
network, and to
analyze the network
data. Like other
software tools, the
data can be saved i
external files.
Additional informatio
comparing the vario
data input formats
used by network
analysis software
packages is availab
at NetWiki. Network
analysis tools allow
researchers to
investigate large
networks like the
Internet, disease
transmission, etc.
These tools provide
mathematical
functions that can b
applied to the netwo
model.
Visualization o
networks
Visual representatio
of social networks is
important to
understand the
network data and
convey the result of
the analysis [1]. Ma
of the analytic
software have
modules for network
visualization.
Exploration of the d
is done through
displaying nodes an
ties in various layou
and attributing color
size and other
advanced properties
to nodes.
Typical representati
of the network data
are graphs in netwo
layout (nodes and
ties). These are not
very easy-to-read a
do not allow an
intuitive interpretatio
Various new method
have been develope
in order to display
network data in mor
intuitive format
(e.g. Sociomapping
Especially when usi
social network
analysis as a tool fo
facilitating change,
different approaches
of participatory
network mapping ha
proven useful. Here
participants /
interviewers provide
network data by
actually mapping ou
the network (with pe
and paper or digitall
during the data
collection session.
One benefit of this
approach is that it
allows researchers
collect qualitative da
and ask clarifying
questions while the
network data is
collected.[23] Exampl
of network mapping
techniques are Net-
Map (pen-and-pape
based)
and VennMaker (dig
l).
Patents
Number of US social ne
patent applications publ
year and patents issued
year[24]
There has been rap
growth in the numbe
of US patent
applications that cov
new technologies
related to social
networking. The
number of published
applications has bee
growing at about
250% per year over
the past five years.
There are now over
2000 published
applications.[25] Only
about 100 of these
applications have
issued as patents,
however, largely du
to the multi-year
backlog in
examination
of business method
patents.