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Deutsche Physikalische Gessellschaft IOP Institute of Physics

New approaches to model and study social networks

Focus on Complex Networked Systems: Theory and Application

P G Lind1,2 and H J Herrmann3,4

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Part of Focus on Complex Networked Systems: Theory and Application

We describe and develop three recent novelties in network research which are particularly useful for studying social systems. The first one concerns the discovery of some basic dynamical laws that enable the emergence of the fundamental features observed in social networks, namely the nontrivial clustering properties, the existence of positive degree correlations and the subdivision into communities. To reproduce all these features, we describe a simple model of mobile colliding agents, whose collisions define the connections between the agents which are the nodes in the underlying network, and develop some analytical considerations. The second point addresses the particular feature of clustering and its relationship with global network measures, namely with the distribution of the size of cycles in the network. Since in social bipartite networks it is not possible to measure the clustering from standard procedures, we propose an alternative clustering coefficient that can be used to extract an improved normalized cycle distribution in any network. Finally, the third point addresses dynamical processes occurring on networks, namely when studying the propagation of information in them. In particular, we focus on the particular features of gossip propagation which impose some restrictions in the propagation rules. To this end we introduce a quantity, the spread factor, which measures the average maximal fraction of nearest neighbours which get in contact with the gossip, and find the striking result that there is an optimal non-trivial number of friends for which the spread factor is minimized, decreasing the danger of being gossiped about.


PACS

89.65.-s Social and economic systems

89.75.Hc Networks and genealogical trees

89.75.Fb Structures and organization in complex systems

Subjects

Statistical physics and nonlinear systems

Dates

Issue 7 (July 2007)

Received 9 January 2007

Published 12 July 2007



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