Social Cohesion and Connectivity: Diffusion Implications of Relational Structure
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Social Cohesion and Connectivity: Diffusion Implications of Relational Structure
James MoodyThe Ohio State University
Population Association of America MeetingsMinneapolis Minnesota, May 1 – 3, 2003
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Why do Networks Matter?
“To speak of social life is to speak of the association between people – their associating in work and in play, in love and in war, to trade or to worship, to help or to hinder. It is in the social relations men establish that their interests find expression and their desires become realized.”
Peter M. Blau, Exchange and Power in Social Life, 1964
"If we ever get to the point of charting a whole city or a whole nation, we would have … a picture of a vast solar system of intangible structures, powerfully influencing conduct, as gravitation does in space. Such an invisible structure underlies society and has its influence in determining the conduct of society as a whole."
J.L. Moreno, New York Times, April 13, 1933
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Why do Networks Matter?The importance of networks is well recognized in demographic work:
•Behrman, Kohler, and Watkins (2003) Demography 713 – 738
•Lusyne, Page and Lievens (2001). Population Studies 281-289
•Astone, NM, CA Nathanson, R Schoen, and YJ Kim. (1999) Population and Development Review 1-31
•Goldstein (1999) Demography 399-407
•Entwisle, Rindfuss. Guilkey,Chamratrithirong; Curran and Sawangdee (1996) Demography 1-11
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Why do Networks Matter?
Social Support
Social Influence
Diffusion
Direct Indirect
Data
Companionship Community
Peer Pressure /Information
Cultural differentiation
Receiving / Transmitting
Population distribution
Local “Ego-network”
Global or partial network
Mechanism:
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Why do Networks Matter? Local vision
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Why do Networks Matter? Global vision
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Combining alternative mechanisms with levels of observation, “Why networks matter?” reduces to two classes of related questions:1) Those dealing with global network structure.
The global structure of the network affects how goods can travel throughout the population. The key elements for diffusion are average path distance and connectivity.
2) Those dealing with individual or group position.• One’s “risk” for receiving/transmitting a good
depends on one’s position in the overall network (“structural embeddedness”)
• The strength and qualities of direct connections (“direct embeddedness”)
Why do Networks Matter?
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Three Approaches to Network Structure1. Small World Networks
Based on Milgram’s (1967) famous work, the substantive point is that networks are structured such that even when most of our connections are local, any pair of people can be connected by a fairly small number of relational steps.
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•High relative probability that a node’s contacts are connected to each other.•Small relative average distance between nodes
C=Large, L is Small = SW Graphs
Three Approaches to Network Structure1. Small World Networks
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Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
Across a large number of substantive settings, Barabási points out that the distribution of network involvement (degree) is highly and characteristically skewed.
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Many large networks are characterized by a highly skewed distribution of the number of partners (degree)
Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
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Many large networks are characterized by a highly skewed distribution of the number of partners (degree)
kkp ~)(
Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
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Colorado Springs High-Risk(Sexual contact only) •Network is power-law
distributed, with = -1.3
Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
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Hubs make the network fragile to node disruption
Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
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Hubs make the network fragile to node disruption
Three Approaches to Network Structure2. Scale-Free Networks
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James Moody and Douglas R. White. “Structural Cohesion and Embeddedness: A hierarchical Conception of Social Groups” American Sociological Review 68:103-127
Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
The minimum requirement for structural cohesion is that the collection be connected.
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
Add relational volume:
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
When focused on one node, the system is still fragile.
Add relational volume:
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
Spreading relations around the structure makes it robust to node removal.
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
Formal definition of Structural Cohesion:(a) A group’s structural cohesion is equal to the minimum number
of actors who, if removed from the group, would disconnect the group.
Equivalently (by Menger’s Theorem):
(b) A group’s structural cohesion is equal to the minimum number of independent paths linking each pair of actors in the group.
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•Networks are structurally cohesive if they remain connected even when nodes are removed
Node Connectivity
0 1 2 3
Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
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Probability of infectionby distance and number of paths, assume a constant p ij of 0.6
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural CohesionSTD diffusion in Colorado Springs
Endemic Chlamydia Structure
Source: Potterat, Muth, Rothenberg, et. al. 2002. Sex. Trans. Infect 78:152-158
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural CohesionSTD diffusion in Colorado Springs
Epidemic Gonorrhea Structure
Source: Potterat, Muth, Rothenberg, et. al. 2002. Sex. Trans. Infect 78:152-158
G=410
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Source: Potterat, Muth, Rothenberg, et. al. 2002. Sex. Trans. Infect 78:152-158
Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural CohesionSTD diffusion in Colorado Springs
Epidemic Gonorrhea Structure
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Structural cohesion gives rise automatically to a clear notion of embeddedness, since cohesive sets nest inside of each other.
Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
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Three Approaches to Network Structure3. Structural Cohesion
Structural Embeddedness has proved important for:
Adolescent SuicideAdolescent females who are not members of the largest bicomponent are 2 times as likely to contemplate suicide (Bearman and Moody, 2003)
Weapon CarryingAdolescents who are not members of the largest bicomponent are 1.37 times more likely to carry weapons to school (Moody, 2003)
Adolescent attachment to school Embeddedness is the strongest predictor of attachment to school (Moody & White, 2003), which is a strong predictor of other health outcomes (Resnick, et. al, 1997).
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and GroupsWhile global network position matters fundamentally, collecting global network data on (most) social relations is very expensive and time consuming.
•First priority: develop network sampling and modeling schemes. This work is underway.
•Identify alternative relations with long-lasting traces•Kinship records•Public interaction (Frank & Yasumoto, 1998)
•Identify cohesion through co-membership•Brieger’s (1974) work on the duality of persons and groups demonstrated how we can link people (groups) to each other through membership. •Data are surprisingly abundant – almost any list can form a basis for co-membership.•The resulting group-level network is robust to standard sampling methods.
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
Advantages of affiliation networks:•Ease of data collection.
Data on activities / presence / membership is easy to collect. A simple list of what people do / where they go is all that is needed. Examples include:
•Formal organizations (clubs, churches, workplaces, etc.)•Event attendance (Parties they’ve been at recently, funerals, etc.)•Common meeting places (bars they frequent, where they met most recent partner, etc.)•Can be time-stamped for greater mixing accuracy
•Sampling. The resulting data are simply a n-way involvement cross-tabulation. This is a frequency table, which at the group-to-group level, is often quite robust to individual-level sampling, even in the face of heavily skewed involvement levels.
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
Disadvantage of affiliation networks:•Co-presence does not necessarily imply interaction
-The resulting network can be thought of as a likely field of potential interaction, but does not record interaction itself. -This level of potential can be modeled, however, by including a basic ego-network module to then model the association between interaction and co-membership.-In general, we can also make some reasonable assumptions about the relation between interaction and membership based on (a) group size and (b) amount of time spent in the organization.
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
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Same Race
SES GPA
Both Smoke
College
Drinking
FightReciprocity
Same Sex
Same Clubs
Transitivity
Intransitivity
Same Grade
Network Model Coefficients, In school Networks
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
The resulting “networks” are cross-tabulations of the number of people that belong to each group:
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In general, the minimum node connectivity of the person to person network is going to equal the edge connectivity (valued) of the group to group network.
The relative edge connectivity is robust to sampling
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Structural Implications of group membership
There is a strong connection between the literature on “Social Capital” and group membership, which provides a theoretical link between notions of structural cohesion, ideational diffusion, and the duality of groups.
Most research on the community building effects of group membership focus on relational volume (c.f. Putnam, 2000).
However, to the extent that our interest is in how group membership creates structurally cohesive settings, interaction pattern is more important than volume. Suggestions about the structure of modern life (Pescosolido & Rubin, 2000), suggest that membership patterns should generate loosely coupled group structures.
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Structural Implications of group membership
Structural cohesion increases when membership in various groups are uncorrelated.
If membership in group i predicts membership in group j (membership structure is tight), then the resulting groups will be nested.
For example, if all Kiwanis members are also Methodists while all Shriners are Catholic
If membership in group i is unrelated to membership in group j, then the resulting network will be structurally cohesive, as unconstrained membership links groups across many domains.
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Paxton (2002)
Groups differ in the extent to which members are jointly involved in other groups.
We don’t currently have good empirical data on membership tightness, though it should be easy to calculate if collected properly.
An untested empirical claim: Membership tightness has declined in the last 100 years.
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
What types of “groups” might be of interest to population researchers?•Village – to – village networks (Entwisle et al, Demography 1997)
If people marry, work, or attend services/festivals across villages, then the village-village links can form a probable contact network.
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Getting Data: Duality of Persons and Groups
What types of “groups” might be of interest to population researchers?•Mixing location. If we know where people ‘hook up’ to find partners, we can identify potential STD cores.
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