Visible materials, visualised theory and images of social research
... that is, material artefacts that can be seen in their own right. They also make visible some elements of culture and social life that we might not otherwise be able to see. But these materials also record the visual perceptions of those who made them, and they can stimulate additional visual percept ...
... that is, material artefacts that can be seen in their own right. They also make visible some elements of culture and social life that we might not otherwise be able to see. But these materials also record the visual perceptions of those who made them, and they can stimulate additional visual percept ...
Repeated Games and Networks
... Takahashi (2010) and Deb (2014).1 Although the matching literature and the literature focusing on stable local interactions (and therefore on networks) share several methodological insights, there are signi…cant di¤erences both in the assumptions on feasible interactions and in the broad aims. Where ...
... Takahashi (2010) and Deb (2014).1 Although the matching literature and the literature focusing on stable local interactions (and therefore on networks) share several methodological insights, there are signi…cant di¤erences both in the assumptions on feasible interactions and in the broad aims. Where ...
Class, property, and structural endogamy: Visualizing networked
... In our view, institutions, such as the complexly varied morphology of class differences of societies and regions, emerge out of networked actions and choices devolving in turn in a specific and changing historical context. People’s lives are influenced and shaped by the flows or biographies of prope ...
... In our view, institutions, such as the complexly varied morphology of class differences of societies and regions, emerge out of networked actions and choices devolving in turn in a specific and changing historical context. People’s lives are influenced and shaped by the flows or biographies of prope ...
Understanding Social Capital
... association with immediate family members, friends and neighbours. Contrary to this, bridging social capital implies those social ties in which people are associated with different socio-economic positions like ties with more distant colleagues and associates. These two concepts are considered to il ...
... association with immediate family members, friends and neighbours. Contrary to this, bridging social capital implies those social ties in which people are associated with different socio-economic positions like ties with more distant colleagues and associates. These two concepts are considered to il ...
Effect of a conspecific`s presence on deprived rats` performance
... energizing (i.e., social facilitation) and directive (i.e., observational learning) aspects of a conspecific’s presence to acquisition of a novel response (barpressing) by rats. Naive rats observed: (a)rats that made both instrumental (barpress) and consummatory (drinking) responses, (b) rats that m ...
... energizing (i.e., social facilitation) and directive (i.e., observational learning) aspects of a conspecific’s presence to acquisition of a novel response (barpressing) by rats. Naive rats observed: (a)rats that made both instrumental (barpress) and consummatory (drinking) responses, (b) rats that m ...
Social Science and Social Policy. From National
... previous such periods (such as that just before the First World War); and a group in-between, sometimes called “transformationists”, who do think the present is a distinctive period but do not go as far as eliminating the State from the social matrix (see Held et al, 1999). Notice that this classific ...
... previous such periods (such as that just before the First World War); and a group in-between, sometimes called “transformationists”, who do think the present is a distinctive period but do not go as far as eliminating the State from the social matrix (see Held et al, 1999). Notice that this classific ...
SCIENCE AND ART IN SOCIAL WORK: AN OLD QUESTION IN THE
... only on their own natural social networks. The extreme levels of need at the time threatened the overuse and eventual collapse of these natural networks. Even after 20 years of independence, artificial or structured support can be found only as a non-fundamental, additional type of support.Alongside ...
... only on their own natural social networks. The extreme levels of need at the time threatened the overuse and eventual collapse of these natural networks. Even after 20 years of independence, artificial or structured support can be found only as a non-fundamental, additional type of support.Alongside ...
Mathematical modeling using semantic networks for teaching
... the application of physical laws to specific systems or include unknown parameters that must be evaluated by tests. Sometimes however, the physical laws that govern the behavior of a system are not fully defined and formulate a mathematical model may be impossible. If so, an experimental model of th ...
... the application of physical laws to specific systems or include unknown parameters that must be evaluated by tests. Sometimes however, the physical laws that govern the behavior of a system are not fully defined and formulate a mathematical model may be impossible. If so, an experimental model of th ...
Linguistic Anthropology in 2013: Super-New-Big AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST Angela Reyes Linguistic Anthropology
... To variable degrees, notions of superdiversity, new media, and big data have drawn attention from several academic disciplines—anthropology, of course, as well as sociolinguistics, sociology, psychology, media studies, economics, computer science, and so on. In scholarly discourses, superdiversity p ...
... To variable degrees, notions of superdiversity, new media, and big data have drawn attention from several academic disciplines—anthropology, of course, as well as sociolinguistics, sociology, psychology, media studies, economics, computer science, and so on. In scholarly discourses, superdiversity p ...
Transnational Processes and Social Activism: An Introduction
... By internalization, we mean the playing out on domestic territory of conflicts that have their origin externally. Previous research on protest events, collected mainly from newspaper sources from Western Europe, stressed the small number of protests that target international institutions directly. A ...
... By internalization, we mean the playing out on domestic territory of conflicts that have their origin externally. Previous research on protest events, collected mainly from newspaper sources from Western Europe, stressed the small number of protests that target international institutions directly. A ...
All of the Above: New Coalitions in Sociocultural Linguistics
... related fields focuses on the U.S. context, with which we are most familiar, it is important to note that in many ways the field we describe has counterparts in other regions of the world. Sociocultural research on language has long been international in scope, extending to Africa, Asia and the Paci ...
... related fields focuses on the U.S. context, with which we are most familiar, it is important to note that in many ways the field we describe has counterparts in other regions of the world. Sociocultural research on language has long been international in scope, extending to Africa, Asia and the Paci ...
A Family of Affiliation Indices for Two
... events, relative to other actors. The one-mode notion of centrality immediately comes to mind as a possible proxy, but upon reflection it doesn‘t take into account the richer types of connections possible in a two-mode network. (For applications of various centrality measures to two-mode networks se ...
... events, relative to other actors. The one-mode notion of centrality immediately comes to mind as a possible proxy, but upon reflection it doesn‘t take into account the richer types of connections possible in a two-mode network. (For applications of various centrality measures to two-mode networks se ...
Science Journals — AAAS
... War II period forms a giant cluster (or it can be said to be “percolated”): The web of alliance connections includes nearly all actors in the system, and there are few isolated clusters of alliances. This means that most of the states are connected to each other indirectly at some degree. If the fir ...
... War II period forms a giant cluster (or it can be said to be “percolated”): The web of alliance connections includes nearly all actors in the system, and there are few isolated clusters of alliances. This means that most of the states are connected to each other indirectly at some degree. If the fir ...
How language changed the genes: toward an explicit account of the
... 148 Daniel Dor and Eva Jablonka ...
... 148 Daniel Dor and Eva Jablonka ...
Information Revelation and Privacy in Online Social Networks (The
... However, the application of social network theory to the study of information revelation (and, implicitly, privacy choices) in online social networks highlights significant differences between the offline and the online scenarios. First, offline social networks are made of ties that can only be loos ...
... However, the application of social network theory to the study of information revelation (and, implicitly, privacy choices) in online social networks highlights significant differences between the offline and the online scenarios. First, offline social networks are made of ties that can only be loos ...
Manifesto of computational social science
... The most insightful computational studies of altruism are due to Nowak and Sigmund Nowak and Sigmund 1998, who had the merit, among others, to point out the role of image scoring in the evolution of donation. In turn, image scoring gave impulse to the study of reputation (for two recent reviews see ...
... The most insightful computational studies of altruism are due to Nowak and Sigmund Nowak and Sigmund 1998, who had the merit, among others, to point out the role of image scoring in the evolution of donation. In turn, image scoring gave impulse to the study of reputation (for two recent reviews see ...
Communication Motives, Satisfaction, and Social Support in the
... material assistance (e.g., resources such as technology and support staff) to cope with a stressful situation. In this study, we employ Miller’s [42] viewpoint for three reasons: first, this classification was developed in an organizational context, rather than adopted from the interpersonal setting ...
... material assistance (e.g., resources such as technology and support staff) to cope with a stressful situation. In this study, we employ Miller’s [42] viewpoint for three reasons: first, this classification was developed in an organizational context, rather than adopted from the interpersonal setting ...
Emergence of communication networks in organizations:
... as an explanatory framework is yet to be harnessed. In pursuit of that goal, over the past decade, many scholars have called for greater attention to the emergence – creation, maintenance, and dissolution – of organizational networks. For example, in a recent essay, Salancik (1995) considered the li ...
... as an explanatory framework is yet to be harnessed. In pursuit of that goal, over the past decade, many scholars have called for greater attention to the emergence – creation, maintenance, and dissolution – of organizational networks. For example, in a recent essay, Salancik (1995) considered the li ...
Manifesto of computational social science | SpringerLink
... These problems depend on the same circumstances that might help us find solutions: a high degree of poorly understood and poorly investigated technology-driven innovation. ICT applications seem to act both in favour and against our capacity to answer the grand challenges before us. The widespread acc ...
... These problems depend on the same circumstances that might help us find solutions: a high degree of poorly understood and poorly investigated technology-driven innovation. ICT applications seem to act both in favour and against our capacity to answer the grand challenges before us. The widespread acc ...
contents list of acronyms
... is vital to its members' survival strategies. Thirdly, gender relations are being transformed through participation in the network; women are assuming a role as a pivot between the formal economy, the informal economy and the barter ...
... is vital to its members' survival strategies. Thirdly, gender relations are being transformed through participation in the network; women are assuming a role as a pivot between the formal economy, the informal economy and the barter ...
Using Complexity Theory Methods for Sociological Theory
... of CT have roots in the development of traditional social system theories in sociology. The notion of analyzing the society and social phenomena as social systems has traditionally been dominant within sociology, beginning with the classics in sociology such as Marx, Durkheim, Compte, Pareto and Web ...
... of CT have roots in the development of traditional social system theories in sociology. The notion of analyzing the society and social phenomena as social systems has traditionally been dominant within sociology, beginning with the classics in sociology such as Marx, Durkheim, Compte, Pareto and Web ...
Neighborhood Effects: Accomplishments and Looking Beyond Them
... Broadly speaking, social interactions arise when individuals (or households) affect each other’s decisions, preferences, information sets, and outcomes, directly rather than indirectly through markets. These interpersonal effects are known as endogenous social effects when own decisions and those of ...
... Broadly speaking, social interactions arise when individuals (or households) affect each other’s decisions, preferences, information sets, and outcomes, directly rather than indirectly through markets. These interpersonal effects are known as endogenous social effects when own decisions and those of ...
Networks and Interactive Learning Among Academic
... The purpose of this paper is to discuss whether the concept of social capital could be used to characterise what is happening in the area of creation of interactions among academia, firms, and government aiming at production and transference of scientific and technological knowledge among these sect ...
... The purpose of this paper is to discuss whether the concept of social capital could be used to characterise what is happening in the area of creation of interactions among academia, firms, and government aiming at production and transference of scientific and technological knowledge among these sect ...
Communicating Global Activism
... conditions of late modern -- globalizing -- societies and their weakened group, party, and ideological bases of political organization and mobilization. Campaigns in such social contexts thus serve more than just the purpose of communicating political messages aimed at achieving political goals. The ...
... conditions of late modern -- globalizing -- societies and their weakened group, party, and ideological bases of political organization and mobilization. Campaigns in such social contexts thus serve more than just the purpose of communicating political messages aimed at achieving political goals. The ...
A new kind of symmetry: Actor-network theories
... other' literacy events and practices that can be identified in different social contexts. The New Literacy Studies shares with ANT a common heritage in anthropology, but different theoretical tnderstandings, both within and between ANT and NLS, determine how any particular social context is defined ...
... other' literacy events and practices that can be identified in different social contexts. The New Literacy Studies shares with ANT a common heritage in anthropology, but different theoretical tnderstandings, both within and between ANT and NLS, determine how any particular social context is defined ...