24 research outputs found
Influence of Personal Preferences on Link Dynamics in Social Networks
We study a unique network dataset including periodic surveys and electronic
logs of dyadic contacts via smartphones. The participants were a sample of
freshmen entering university in the Fall 2011. Their opinions on a variety of
political and social issues and lists of activities on campus were regularly
recorded at the beginning and end of each semester for the first three years of
study. We identify a behavioral network defined by call and text data, and a
cognitive network based on friendship nominations in ego-network surveys. Both
networks are limited to study participants. Since a wide range of attributes on
each node were collected in self-reports, we refer to these networks as
attribute-rich networks. We study whether student preferences for certain
attributes of friends can predict formation and dissolution of edges in both
networks. We introduce a method for computing student preferences for different
attributes which we use to predict link formation and dissolution. We then rank
these attributes according to their importance for making predictions. We find
that personal preferences, in particular political views, and preferences for
common activities help predict link formation and dissolution in both the
behavioral and cognitive networks.Comment: 12 page
Analysis of Link Formation, Persistence and Dissolution in NetSense Data
We study a unique behavioral network data set (based on periodic surveys and
on electronic logs of dyadic contact via smartphones) collected at the
University of Notre Dame.The participants are a sample of members of the
entering class of freshmen in the fall of 2011 whose opinions on a wide variety
of political and social issues and activities on campus were regularly recorded
- at the beginning and end of each semester - for the first three years of
their residence on campus. We create a communication activity network implied
by call and text data, and a friendship network based on surveys. Both networks
are limited to students participating in the NetSense surveys. We aim at
finding student traits and activities on which agreements correlate well with
formation and persistence of links while disagreements are highly correlated
with non-existence or dissolution of links in the two social networks that we
created. Using statistical analysis and machine learning, we observe several
traits and activities displaying such correlations, thus being of potential use
to predict social network evolution
Editing the Manuscripts of Forgotten Sanskrit Texts
The article will point to the fact that there is vast scope for acquiring the manuscripts of forgotten Sanskrit texts and editingthem on the basis of all possible helpful sources. Instead of treading the conventional paths, young scholars should attempt to take up new subjects based on the study of the manuscripts of unknown or forgotten Sanskrit texts