Online Social Network Textbook
For an introduction to the methods used in social network analysis, you can look at Introduction to Social Network Methods, by Robert A. Hanneman (Department of Sociology, University of California-Riverside) and Mark Riddle (Department of Sociology, University of Northern Colorado), a 2005 textbook that has been posted online so that people can use it for free. (The authors do require that you give them credit if you incorporate content from the book in your own work.)The table of contents:
Preface
- Social network data
- Why formal methods?
- Using graphs to represent social relations
- Working with Netdraw to visualize graphs
- Using matrices to represent social relations
- Working with network data
- Connection
- Embedding
- Ego networks
- Centrality and power
- Cliques and sub-groups
- Positions and roles: The idea of equivalence
- Measures of similarity and structural equivalence
- Automorphic equivalence
- Regular equivalence
- Multiplex networks
- Two-mode networks
- Some statistical tools
Bibliography
Labels: Learning resources, Networking
<< Home