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Social Network Analysis
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Details

  • 115 b/w illus. 67 tables
  • Page extent: 857 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 1.152 kg

Library of Congress

  • Dewey number: 302/.01/1
  • Dewey version: 20
  • LC Classification: HM131 .W356 1994
  • LC Subject headings:
    • Social networks--Research--Methodology
    • Youth--Germany--Social conditions
    • Germany--History--1871-
    • France--Intellectual life--18th century
    • Natural resources, Communal

Library of Congress Record

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Paperback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521387071 | ISBN-10: 0521387078)

  • There was also a Hardback of this title but it is no longer available
  • Published November 1994

In stock

$49.00 (Z)

Social network analysis, which focuses on relationships among social entities, is used widely in the social and behavioral sciences, as well as in economics, marketing, and industrial engineering. Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications reviews and discusses methods for the analysis of social networks with a focus on applications of these methods to many substantive examples. As the first book to provide a comprehensive coverage of the methodology and applications of the field, this study is both a reference book and a textbook.

Contents

Part I. Introduction: Networks, Relations, and Structure: 1. Relations and networks in the social and behavioral sciences; 2. Social network data: collection and application; Part II. Mathematical Representations of Social Networks: 3. Notation; 4. Graphs and matrixes; Part III. Structural and Locational Properties: 5. Centrality, prestige, and related actor and group measures; 6. Structural balance, clusterability, and transitivity; 7. Cohesive subgroups; 8. Affiliations, co-memberships, and overlapping subgroups; Part IV. Roles and Positions: 9. Structural equivalence; 10. Blockmodels; 11. Relational algebras; 12. Network positions and roles; Part V. Dyadic and Triadic Methods: 13. Dyads; 14. Triads; Part VI. Statistical Dyadic Interaction Models: 15. Statistical analysis of single relational networks; 16. Stochastic blockmodels and goodness-of-fit indices; Part VII. Epilogue: 17. Future directions.

Reviews

"It should be an invaluable reference for scholars in the field and a critical resource...." Journal of the American Statistical Association

"The long-awaited publication of this volume marks a half-century maturation of social network analysis into a multidisciplinary research specialty with distinctive vocabulary, theoretical principles, and data-analytic techniques. Wasserman and Faust provide a compass by which to steer our path into the next century." Theory and Methods

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