Social network analysis

Authors
Publication date 2009
Host editors
  • C. Crothers
Book title Historical developments and theoretical approaches in sociology/social theory
Series Encyclopedia of life support systems
Number of pages 22
Publisher Oxford: Eolss Publishers
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
Social network analysis (SNA) focuses on the structure of ties within a set of social actors, e.g., persons, groups, organizations, and nations, or the products of human activity or cognition such as web sites, semantic concepts, and so on. It is linked to structuralism in sociology stressing the significance of relations among social actors to their behaviour, opinions, and attitudes. Social network analysis is felt to be appropriate for analyzing social cohesion, brokerage and exchange, as well as social ranking within or among social groups.
Two perspectives dominate SNA: the socio-centred and ego-centred perspective. The socio-centred perspective analyses overall network structure. It looks for patterns of ties that indicate cohesive social groups, central actors that may be paramount to the integration of the social network, and asymmetries that may reflect social prestige or social stratification. Recent advances are found primarily in the technique of blockmodelling. The ego-centred perspective focuses on the composition of local network structure. Do actors influence one another through their network ties (social influence model) and/or do actors adjust their ties to the characteristics of their peers and to their ties with them (social selection model)? Recent advances in this area include new types of statistical models.
The development and interest in SNA has increased sharply over the last few decades due to the application of mathematics - notably graph theory and statistical models - and the wide availability of software for network analysis both commercial and freely available through the internet. In addition to the formal, quantitative approach to social network analysis, a qualitative approach to social networks is developing.
1
Document type Chapter
Note Gepubliceerde versie (313019.pdf); Draft, met duidelijker afbeeldingen (313019draft.pdf)
Published at http://www.eolss.net/
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