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Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of...

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Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’[email protected] k
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Page 1: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

Susan O’SheaThe Mitchell Centre for Social Network AnalysisCCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester

susan.o’[email protected]

Page 2: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 2Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

What is Network Analysis?

Network analysis is the study of social relations among a set of actors.

Social relations can be thought of as dyadic attributes.

Types of Network Analysis

Ego network analysis: Respondents are asked about the people they interact with and the relationships between them.

Data can be collected via observation, archives (including facebook) and surveys. Used in conjunction with random sampling, which enables classical statistical techniques to be used to test hypotheses.

Complete network analysis: tries to obtain all the relationships among a set of respondents, e.g. Friendships of co-workers

Difficulties with missing data and autocorrelation. Statistical modelling can help with these issues.

Page 3: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 3Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Connections

Homophily: Birds of a feather flock together. The extent to which actors form ties with similar versus dissimilar others. Similarity can be defined by gender, race, age, occupation, educational achievement, status, values or any other salient characteristic. 

Mutuality/Reciprocity: Is the relationship between two actors reciprocated, for example friendship. Possibility of cognitive dissonance. Common concept in the analysis of social capital.

Network Closure: Friends of friends are my friends too. This is known as transitivity. Network closure is a measure of the occurrence of triads within the network.

Page 4: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 4Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Distributions

Density: Direct ties in a network relative to the total number possible

Centrality: a set of measures examining the influence or importance of a particular node within the network.

Distance: The smallest number of ties required to connect two actors The idea of ‘six degrees of separation’ or small world effect

Bridge: An actor providing the only link between two individuals or clusters Structural holes: The absence of ties between two parts of a network.  Useful concept for social capital; has business applications

Tie Strength: Strong ties associated with homophily; weak ties with bridges

Page 5: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 5Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Exploratory analysis Provides qualitative information Allows us represent complex information visually

However: Must be effective Should be valid Can be misleading Open to interpretation

Visualizing Networks

Page 6: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 6Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

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Nodes: Represent actors

Edges: Represent relationships (Ties)

Attribute based We use the attributes of the nodes to position them e.g. gender

Scaling methods We use known or derived distances, e.g. Cities, countries

Graph theoretic We use properties of the network (density, closure etc.)

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Page 7: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 7Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

Blocks and cut-points

Courtney Love link between dense sub-cliques. Patty Schemel link between groups. Played with Hole and is currently involved with Rock Camp for Girls. Corin Tucker, Kathleen Hanna, Allison Wolf and Tobi Vail bridging the network.

Affiliation network129 Riot Grrrl bands 534 actors

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Page 8: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 8Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Who is important in a network & does structure matter?

Centrality is a measure of how a node’s importance is determined by network structure and position

With UCINETUnder Network | Centrality

DegreeClosenessBetweenessEigenvector

With NetDrawUnder Analyze | Centrality

https://sites.google.com/site/ucinetsoftware/home

Page 9: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 9Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

What are Ego Networks?

An ego network is a network focused on a single actor (e.g. a person), referred to as the ‘ego’

Information on his/her ‘alters’ is gathered (e.g. Friends)

Usually alter to alter relationships are collected

Where possible attribute data on ego and alters is gathered

Page 10: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 10Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

Ego networksLeft - Courtney Love & Patty Schemel; Right – Corin, Kathleen, Allison & Tobi

This reflects a division between Riot Grrrl Activism and DIY music and more ‘professional’ commercial music represented by Patty and Courtney. There are also more men in the ego networks of these two actors.

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Page 11: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 11Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Cohesive subgroups

Areas of the network in which actors are more closely related to each other than actors outside the group

It is a concept not a formal definition

Based on relations rather than attributes e.g. Collaboration networks, close friends

Clique is a cohesive subgroup with at least 3 members and

Page 12: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 12Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

Friends T1

Close friends T1

Page 13: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 13Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

Friends T3

Page 14: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 14Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

Ladyfest Ten network all nominations at 3 time points including shared activities and events after the festival

Page 15: Susan O’Shea The Mitchell Centre for Social Network Analysis CCSR/Social Statistics, University of Manchester susan.o’shea@manchester.ac.uk.

20/04/23 15Susan O'Shea, University of Manchester.

susan.o'[email protected]

5th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 2-5 July 2012

Analysing your own Facebook Ego Network 1. Go to http://apps.facebook.com/namegenweb

4. Open up notepad, this is in All Programs>Accessories (you can use word but you must save the file as a plain text file)

5. Copy and paste the downloaded file (which should be open) into notepad. Save the file as something like myfacebook.

6. Start up UCINET and click Data>import text file>dl and enter your file, that is myfacebook

7. Your data should now be in UCINET and you can view it in Netdraw.

2. Click on UCInet - log into your facebook account

3. The app will download a file, this takes a few minutes


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