"Visual Complexity" (A Random Walk)
Node-link diagrams (or "graph drawing") come in a range of forms, with varying levels of complexity. These are so visually engaging and dazzling that it sometimes takes some doing to get past the look-and-feel and move to the substance...
By Shalin Hai-Jew, Instructional Designer, iTAC, K-State
Colleague 2 Colleague (C2C)'s SIDLIT
Aug. 2 - 3, 2012
Session Description: A common trend in online learning involves a focus on interactivity (how learners engage with others in the online classroom) and long-term social interactions over time (for competitive advantages). This presentation will introduce a software program that creates node-link diagrams to map social networks to show connections between centers and peripheries, the thick nodes and the thin ones, and some of the conclusions that may be drawn from these visualizations. Social network analysis has been used in a variety of fields: epidemiology, terror group analysis, cultural analysis, and even online learning. This type of research is necessarily multidisciplinary (juxtaposing disciplinary perspectives), interdisciplinary (integrative of various disciplinary data), and transdisciplinary (forming comprehensive frameworks transcending the narrower world views). On the surface alone, social network analysis draws from network analysis; sociology; psychology, and other domains. Further, this research taps unique domains to draw out analytical information. This presentation will include a smattering of some of the findings of the research on social networks. This may include the analysis of some homegrown data from an institution of higher education in Kansas.
Presentation Overview
Introduction to Social Networks
Some Social Network Research Discoveries (Examples)
SOCIALIZING
Mediated Friendships
Small World Networks
Job Hunting and Weak Ties
DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION (or Anything Transmittable)
Diffusion of Innovation
POPULATION HEALTH
Epidemiology and Herd Immunities
POWER (and the Structures of Power)
Selectorate Theory
Brokerage Roles / Tertius Gaudens / Exploiting Gaps / Breaking Groups
Terror Groups and Structures
HIGHER EDUCATION
Conclusion
Resources
Selected Social Network Diagrams
Let's Talk!
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