4.4 Article

Same but different A comparison of estimation approaches for exponential random graph models for multiple networks

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Political Science

The Incidental Pundit: Who Talks Politics with Whom, and Why?

William Minozzi et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE (2020)

Article Ecology

The area under the precision-recall curve as a performance metric for rare binary events

Helen R. Sofaer et al.

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION (2019)

Article Statistics & Probability

Abandon Statistical Significance

Blakeley B. McShane et al.

AMERICAN STATISTICIAN (2019)

Article Sociology

More Than a Sorting Machine: Ethnic Boundary Making in a Stratified School System

Hanno Kruse et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY (2019)

Article Communication

Modeling Valued Organizational Communication Networks Using Exponential Random Graph Models

Andrew Pilny et al.

MANAGEMENT COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY (2018)

Article Sociology

Connected in Crime: The Enduring Effect of Neighborhood Networks on the Spatial Patterning of Violence

Andrew V. Papachristos et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY (2018)

Article Anthropology

Communication flows and the durability of a transnational social field

Ashton M. Verdery et al.

SOCIAL NETWORKS (2018)

Article Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications

brms: An R Package for Bayesian Multilevel Models Using Stan

Paul-Christian Buerkner

JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE (2017)

Article Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications

Stan: A Probabilistic Programming Language

Bob Carpenter et al.

JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE (2017)

Article Statistics & Probability

ergm: A Package to Fit, Simulate and Diagnose Exponential-Family Models for Networks

David R. Hunter et al.

Journal of Statistical Software (2015)

Article Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications

Conducting Meta-Analyses in R with the metafor Package

Wolfgang Viechtbauer

JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE (2010)

Article Communication

The Coevolution of Networks and Political Attitudes

David Lazer et al.

POLITICAL COMMUNICATION (2010)

Article Anthropology

Curved exponential family models for social networks

David R. Hunter

SOCIAL NETWORKS (2007)

Article Statistics & Probability

The difference between significant and not significant is not itself statistically significant

Andrew Gelman et al.

AMERICAN STATISTICIAN (2006)

Article Mathematics, Interdisciplinary Applications

A multilevel network study of the effects of delinquent behavior on friendship evolution

TAB Snijders et al.

JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL SOCIOLOGY (2003)