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Social Networks, Volume 70
Volume 70, July 2022
- Matthew Smith, Yasaman Sarabi:
How does the behaviour of the core differ from the periphery? - An international trade network analysis. 1-15 - Marie Stadel, Gert Stulp:
Balancing bias and burden in personal network studies. 16-24 - Vera L. Buijs, Gert Stulp:
Friends, family, and family friends: Predicting friendships of Dutch women. 25-35 - Jared Edgerton:
Suicide bomber mobilization and kin and peer ties. 36-54 - Alexander V. Graham, John McLevey, Pierson Browne, Tyler Crick:
Structural diversity is a poor proxy for information diversity: Evidence from 25 scientific fields. 55-63 - Hanno Kruse, Clemens Kroneberg:
Contextualizing oppositional cultures: The variable significance of gender and ethnic minority status across schools. 64-76 - José Luis Estévez, Dorottya Kisfalusi, Károly Takács:
More than one's negative ties: The role of friends' antipathies in high school gossip. 77-89 - Sevag Kevork, Göran Kauermann:
Bipartite exponential random graph models with nodal random effects. 90-99 - Peter A. Gloor, Matthäus Paul Zylka, Andrea Fronzetti Colladon, Márton Makai:
'Entanglement' - A new dynamic metric to measure team flow. 100-111 - Zoltán Kmetty, Róbert Tardos:
Party Nexus Position Generator: New tool for the measurement of political homophily and political network diversity. 112-125 - Cassie McMillan, Derek A. Kreager, René Veenstra:
Keeping to the code: How local norms of friendship and dating inform macro-structures of adolescents' romantic networks. 126-137 - Elisa Bellotti, Dominika Czerniawska, Martin G. Everett, Luigi Guadalupi:
Gender inequalities in research funding: Unequal network configurations, or unequal network returns? 138-151 - Marva V. Goodson-Miller:
A first look at justice-involved women's egocentric social networks. 152-165 - Kristel Vignery:
From networked students centrality to student networks density: What really matters for student performance? 166-186 - Weihua An:
You said, they said: A framework on informant accuracy with application to studying self-reports and peer-reports. 187-197 - Bogdan W. Mach, John E. Jackson, Ireneusz Sadowski:
Estimating peer political influence with large N observational data on ego-centered social networks. 198-207 - Hwajin Shin:
Is Trust Really There? Unpacking the role of trust in ethnic friendship networks of North Korean refugees. 208-217 - Felix Gaisbauer, Ariana Strandburg-Peshkin, Helge Giese:
Local Majority-with-inertia Rule Can Explain Global Consensus Dynamics in A Network Coordination Game. 218-227 - Li Ling, Yaokuang Li, Dan Long, Yalin Wang:
Does syndicating bring syndicating ?An exploration targeting ECF based on social structure by complex network analysis. 228-239 - Damjan Skulj, Ales Ziberna:
Stochastic blockmodeling of linked networks. 240-252 - Ryan Federo, Xavier Bustamante:
The ties that bind global governance: Using media-reported events to disentangle the global interorganizational network in a global pandemic. 253-266 - Per Becker, Örjan Bodin:
Brokerage activity, exclusivity and role diversity: A three-dimensional approach to brokerage in networks. 267-283 - Shira Offer, Claude S. Fischer:
How new is "New"? Who gets added in a panel study of personal networks? 284-294 - Andres Sevtsuk, Bahij Chancey, Rounaq Basu, Martina Mazzarello:
Spatial structure of workplace and communication between colleagues: A study of E-mail exchange and spatial relatedness on the MIT campus. 295-305 - Jan Schulz, Daniel M. Mayerhoffer, Anna Gebhard:
A network-based explanation of inequality perceptions. 306-324 - Alberto Nieto, Toby Davies, Hervé Borrion:
"Offending with the accomplices of my accomplices": Evidence and implications regarding triadic closure in co-offending networks. 325-333 - Martin G. Everett, David Schoch:
An extended family of measures for directed networks. 334-340 - Verónica de Miguel Luken:
Migration, mixedness, and the partner's role in core discussion networks. 341-352 - Adrian Toroslu, Eva Jaspers:
Avoidance in action: Negative tie closure in balanced triads among pupils over time. 353-363 - Tomás Diviák, Casper S. van Nassau, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Tom A. B. Snijders:
Dynamics and disruption: Structural and individual changes in two Dutch Jihadi networks after police interventions. 364-374 - Ronald S. Burt, Ray E. Reagans:
Team talk: Learning, jargon, and structure versus the pulse of the network. 375-392 - Max E. Coleman, Mohit K. Manchella, Adam R. Roth, Siyun Peng, Brea L. Perry:
What kinds of social networks protect older adults' health during a pandemic? The tradeoff between preventing infection and promoting mental health. 393-402
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