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Social Networks Analysis
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Social Networks Analysis

Four Volume Set
Edited by:


December 2007 | 1 648 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Social network analysis is a crucial method in the understanding of human behaviour. It is currently growing at a extremely rapid rate and has become a major focus of teaching and research-not only in social science departments, but in computer science, physics and in business schools. This four-volume set is brought together by Linton Freeman, founder and editor for 28 years of the key journal in the field, Social Networks. He has collected the the very best published work on social network analysis, covering of over forty years of journals and books. It is a key addition to the SAGE Benchmarks in Social Research Methods series.

Volume One: Data, Mathematical Models and Graphics

Volume Two: The Structure of Social Groups

Volume Three: The Structure of Social Positions

Volume Four: Antecedents and Consequences of Network Structure

 
Volume One
Data, Mathematical Models and Graphics

 
 
General Introduction
 
Introduction to Volume One
 
PART ONE: SOCIAL NETWORK DATA
P V Marsden
Network Data and Measurement
H R Bernard et al
On the Validity of Retrospective Data
The Problem of Informant Accuracy

 
L C Freeman, A K Romney and S C Freeman
Cognitive Structure and Informant Accuracy
D Krackhardt
Cognitive Social Structures
L C Freeman, S C Freeman and A G Michaelson
On Human Social Intelligence
E Kumbasar, A K Romney and W H Barchelder
Systematic Biases in Social Perception
D D Brewer and C M Webster
Forgetting of Friends and Its Effects on Measuring Friendship Networks
R S Burt
Decay Functions
K Faust and J Skvoretz
Comparing Networks across Space and Time, Size and Species
 
PART TWO: MATHEMATICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL MODELS
A Rapoport and W J Horvath
A Study of a Large Sociogram
P W Holland and S Leinhardt
An Exponential Family of Probability Distributions for Directed Graphs
S Wasserman and P Pattison
Logit Models and Logistic Regressions for Social Networks
1. An Introduction to Markov Graphs and p·

 
P D Hoff, A E Raftery and M S Handcock
Latent Space Approaches to Social Network Analysis
M S Handcock, A E Raferty and J M Tantrum
Model-Based Clustering for Social Networks
 
PART THREE: GRAPHIC IMAGES
U Brandes et al
Explorations into the Visualization of Policy Networks
C McGrath, J Blythe and D Krackhardt
The Effect of Spatial Arrangement on Judgments and Errors in Interpreting Graphs
L Krempel and T Pl[um]umper
Exploring the Dynamics of International Trade by Combining the Comparative Advantages of Multivariate Statistics and Network Visualizations
 
Volume Two
The Stucture of Social Groups

 
 
Introduction to Volume Two
 
PART ONE: SOCIAL GROUPS: CLIQUES AND RELATED CONCEPTS
R J Mokken
Cliques, Clubs and Clans
S B Seidman and B L Foster
A Graph-Theoretic Generalization of the Clique Concept
 
PART TWO: SOCIAL GROUPS: OTHER APPROACHES
R L Breiger
The Duality of Persons and Groups
W Zachary
An Information Flow Model for Conflict and Fission in Small Groups
S B Seidman
L S Sets and Cohesive Subsets of Graphs and Hypergraphs
L D Sailer and S J C Gaulin
Proximity, Sociality and Observation
The Definition of Small Groups

 
L C Freeman
The Sociological Concept of 'Group'
An Empirical Test of Two Models

 
L C Freeman and D R White
Using Galois Lattices to Represent Network Data
S P Borgatti and M G Everett
Models of Core/Periphery Structures
K A Frank
Identifying Cohesive Subgroups
J Moody and D R White
Structural Cohesion and Embeddedness
A Hierarchical Concept of Social Groups

 
L C Freeman
Finding Social Groups
A Meta-Analysis of the Southern Women Data

 
 
PART THREE: SOCIAL GROUPS: DYNAMICS
M A J van Duijn et al
Evolution of Sociology Freshmen into a Friendship Network
K Carley
A Theory of Group Stability
 
Volume Three
The Structure of Social Positions

 
 
Introduction to Volume Three
 
PART ONE: SOCIAL POSITIONS: EQUIVALENCE BASED
F P Lorrain and H C White
Structural Equivalence of Individuals in Social Networks
H C White, S A Boorman and R L Breiger
Social Structure from Multiple Networks
1: Blockmodels of Roles and Positions

 
R L Breiger, S A Boorman and P Arabie
An Algorithm for Clustering Relational Data with Applications to Social Network Analysis and Comparison to Multidimensional Scaling
R S Burt
Positions in Networks
D R White and K P Reitz
Graph and Semigroup Homomorphisms on Networks of Relations
P Doreian, V Batagelj and A Ferligoj
Partitioning Networks on Generalized Concepts of Equivalence
J P Boyd and K J Jonas
Are Social Equivalences Ever Regular? Permutation and Exact Tests
 
PART TWO: SOCIAL POSITIONS: HIERARCHIES
I Chase
Dynamics of Hierarchy Formation
The Sequential Development of Dominance Relationships

 
A Mazur and M Cataldo
Dominance and Deference in Conversation
N Friedkin and E E Johnsen
Social Positions in Influence Networks
J C Johnson et al
Network Role Analysis in the Study of Food Webs
An Application of Regular Coloring

 
 
PART THREE: SOCIAL POSITIONS: CENTRALITIES
L C Freeman
Centrality in Social Networks
Conceptual Clarification

 
P Bonacich
Power and Centrality
A Family of Measures

 
M E J Newman
A Measure of Betweenness Centrality Based on Random Walks
S P Borgatti and M G Everett
A Graph-Theoretic Perspective on Centrality
 
Volume Four
Antecedents and Consequences of Network Structure

 
 
Introduction to Volume Four
 
PART ONE: ANTECEDENTS: PHYSICAL PROXIMITY
B Latan[ac]e et al
Distance Matters
Physical Space and Social Impact

 
C T Butts
Predictability of Large-Scale Spatially Embedded Networks
 
PART TWO: ANTECEDENTS: HOMOPHILY
Herminia Ibarra
Homophily and Differential Returns
Sex Differences in Network Structure and Access in an Advertising Firm

 
J M McPherson, L Smith-Lovin and J M Cook
Birds of a Feather
Homophily in Social Networks

 
 
PART THREE:ANTECEDENTS: BALANCE
D Cartwright and F Harary
Structural Balance
A Generalization of Heider's Theory

 
P Doreian and D Krackhardt
Pre-Transitive Balance Mechanisms for Signed Networks
 
PART FOUR: CONSEQUENCES: ACCESS TO INFORMATION
J Coleman, E Katz and H Menzel
The Diffusion of an Innovation among Physicians
E M Rogers and G M Beal
The Importance of Personal Influence in the Adoption of Technological Changes
M Granovetter
The Strength of Weak Ties
D J Watts and S H Strogatz
Collective Dynamics of 'Small World' Networks
 
PART FIVE: CONSEQUENCES: SUCCESS OR PROMINENCE
H J Leavitt
Some Effects of Certain Communication Patterns on Group Performance
E O Laumann, J Galaskiewicz and P V Marsden
Community Structure as Interorganizational Linkages
J A Stoloff, J L Glanville and E J Bienenstock
Women's Participation in the Labor Force
The Role of Social Networks

 
Nathaniel Bulkley and Marshall Van Alstyne
An Empirical Analysis of Strategies and Efficiencies in Social Networks
 
PART SIX: CONSEQUENCES: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND SOCIAL CONTROL
E Bott
Urban Families
Conjugal Roles and Social Networks

 
B Wellman and S Wortley
Different Strokes from Different Folks
Community Ties and Social Support

 
 
PART SEVEN: CONSEQUENCES: HEALTH AND ILLNESS
P Gould and R Wallace
Spatial Structures and Scientific Paradoxes in the AIDS Pandemic
M Morris and M Kretzschmar
Concurrent Partnerships and the Spread of HIV
S Cohen et al
Social Ties and Susceptibility to the Common Cold

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter One Volume One PDF