Title: Network Analysis by Barry Wellman
1Network Analysisby Barry Wellman
2(No Transcript)
3Three Ways to Look at Reality
- Categories
- All Possess One or More Properties as an
Aggregate of Individuals - Examples Men, Developed Countries
- Groups
- (Almost) All Densely-Knit Within Tight Boundary
- Thought of as a Solitary Unit (Really a Special
Network) - Family, Workgroup, Community
- Networks
- Set of Connected Units People, Organizations,
Networks - Can Belong to Multiple Networks
- Examples Friendship, Organizational, Inter-,
World-System, Internet
4Nodes, Relationships Ties
- Nodes A Unit That Possibly is Connected
- Individuals, Households, Groups, Organizations,
States - Relationships (A Specific Type of Connection)
- Gives Emotional Support
- Sends Money To
- Attacks
- Ties (One or More Relationships)
- Friendship (with possibly many relationships)
5A Network is More Than The Sum of Its Ties
- A Network Consists of One or More Nodes
- Could be Persons, Organizations, Groups, Nations
- Connected by One or More Ties
- Could be One or More Relationships
- That Form Distinct, Analyzable Patterns
- Can Study Patterns of Relationships OR Ties
6Overview - Journals
- Wellman founded, Connections, 1977
- Informal journal Useful articles, news,
gossip, grants, abstracts, book summaries - Bill Richards, Tom Valente edit now
- Lin Freeman founded, Social Networks, 1978
- Formal journal Refereed articles
- Ronald Breiger now co-editor
- David Krackhardt founded, J of Social Structure,
2000 - Online, Refereed
- Lots of visuals
- Articles Appear Occasionally when their time has
come
7Overview Key Books
- Elizabeth Bott, Family Social Network, 1957
- J. Clyde Mitchell, Networks, Norms
Institutions, 1973 - Holland Leinhardt, Perspectives on Social
Network Research,1979 - S. D. Berkowitz, An Introduction to Structural
Analysis, 1982 - Knoke Kuklinski, Network Analysis, 1983
- Charles Tilly, Big Structures, Large Processes,
Huge Comparisons, 1984 - David Knoke, Political Networks, 1990
- John Scott, Social Network Analysis, 1991
- Ron Burt, Structural Holes, 1992
- Manuel Castells, The Rise of Network Society,
1996, 2000 - Wasserman Faust, Social Network Analysis, 1992
- Nan Lin, Social Capital (monograph reader),
2001 - Monge Contractor, Theories of Communication
Networks, 2003
8Overview Software
- UCINet Whole Network Analysis
- MultiNet Whole Network Analysis
- PStar Dyadic Analysis
- Krackplot Network Visualization
- Pajek Network Visualization
- Personal Network Analysis
- SPSS/SAS See Wellman, et al. How To papers
9The Social Network Approach
- The world is composed of networks - not
densely-knit, tightly-bounded groups - Networks provide flexible means of social
organization and of thinking about social
organization - Networks have emergent properties of structure
and composition - Networks are a major source of social capital
mobilizable in themselves and from their contents - Networks are self-shaping and reflexive
- Networks scale up to networks of networks
10Networked Individualism
- Moving from a society bound up in little boxes to
a multiple network and networking society - Networks are a flexible means of social
organization - Networks are a major source of social capital
mobilizable in themselves from their contents - Networks link
- Persons
- Within organizations
- Between organizations and institutions
11Little Boxes
Glocalization
Networked Individualism
Barry Wellman co-editor Social Structure A
Network ApproachJAI-Elsevier Press 1998
12Ways of Looking at Networks
- Whole Networks Personal Networks
- Focus on the System or on the Set of Individuals
- Graphs Matrices
- We dream in graphs
- We analyze in matrices
13Whole Social Networks
- Comprehensive Set of Role Relationships in a Full
System - Analyze Each Role Relationship Can Combine
- Composition Women Heterogeneity Weak Ties
- Structure Pattern of Ties
- Village, Organization, Kinship, Enclaves,
World-System - Typical Methods Cliques, Blocks, Centrality,
Flows - (1) What is the Real Structure of an
Organization? - (2) How Does Information Flow Through a Village?
14Duality of Persons Groups
- People Link Groups
- Groups Link People
- An Interpersonal Net is an Interorganizational
Net - Ronald Breiger 1973
15The Dualities of Persons and Groups -- Graphs
16Dualities of Persons and Groups -- Matrices
17Dualities of Persons and Groups Event-Event
Matrix
18Neat Whole Network Methods
- QAP
- Regression of Matrices
- Example Co-Citation (Intellectual Tie)
- Predicts Better than Friendship (Social Tie)
- To Inter-Citation
- Clustering High Density Tight Boundaries
(Groups) - Block Modeling
- Similar Role Relationships, Not Necessarily
Clusters - Canada Mexico in Same Block US Dominated
-
19Erickson, 1988 From a Matrix gt . . .
20. . . To a Block Model
21Costs of Whole Network Analysis
- Requires a Roster of Entire Population
- Requires (Imposition of) a Social Boundary
- This May Assume What You Want to Find
- Hard to Handle Missing Data
- Needs Special Analytic Packages
- Becoming Easier to Use
22Personal Social Networks
- Ptolemaic Ego-Centered View
- Good for Unbounded Networks
- Often Uses Survey Research
- Example
- (1) Do Densely-Knit Networks Provide More
Support? (structure) - (2) Do More Central People Get More
Support?(network) - (2) Do Women Provide More Support? (composition)
- (3) Do Face-to-Face Ties Provide More Support
Than Internet Ties? (relational) - (4) Are People More Isolated Now? (ego)