This link has been bookmarked by 66 people . It was first bookmarked on 06 Aug 2006, by Aurélien.
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07 Nov 17
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Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega@raulpacheco @BerardoRamiro @EnvPolicyCenter @marc_smith UCInet + https://t.co/WK1mA7sjhm
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10 Oct 16
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Robert A. and Mark
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About this book
This on-line textbook introduces many of the basics of formal approaches to the analysis of social networks. The text relies heavily on the work of Freeman, Borgatti, and Everett (the authors of the UCINET software package). The materials here, and their organization, were also very strongly influenced by the text of Wasserman and Faust, and by a graduate seminar conducted by Professor Phillip Bonacich at UCLA. Many other users have also made very helpful comments and suggestions based on the first version. Errors and omissions, of course, are the responsibility of the authors.
You are invited to use and redistribute this text freely -- but please acknowledge the source.
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Riverside, CA: University of California, Riverside ( published in digital form at
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toto2dgrt7. Connection
8. Embedding
9. Ego networks
10. Centrality and power
11. Cliques and sub-groups
12. Positions and roles: The idea of equivalence
13. Measures of similarity and structural equivalence
14. Automorphic equivalence
15. Regular equivalence
16. Multiplex networks
17. Two-mode networks
18. Some statistical tools -
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Clint LalondeThis on-line textbook introduces many of the basics of formal approaches to the analysis of social networks.
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yoyzhouThis on-line textbook introduces many of the basics of formal approaches to the analysis of social networks. The text relies heavily on the work of Freeman, Borgatti, and Everett (the authors of the UCINET software package). The materials here, and their organization, were also very strongly influenced by the text of Wasserman and Faust, and by a graduate seminar conducted by Professor Phillip Bonacich at UCLA. Many other users have also made very helpful comments and suggestions based on the first version. Errors and omissions, of course, are the responsibility of the authors.
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Arnau MontyOnline documentation: Introduction to social network methods http://t.co/tpGNy2In #osn cc @arnaumonty
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Alan LevineThis on-line textbook introduces many of the basics of formal approaches to the analysis of social networks.
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