3.8 Article

Multidimensional homophily in friendship networks

Journal

NETWORK SCIENCE
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 189-212

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/nws.2014.17

Keywords

homophily; network evolution; stochastic actor-oriented models; adolescent networks

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute Of Child Health & Human Development [R01HD052887]
  2. Social Network Analysis of Peers and Smoking in Adolescence (SNAPS) - Medical Research Council of the UK

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Homophily the tendency for individuals to associate with similar others is one of the most persistent findings in social network analysis. Its importance is established along the lines of a multitude of sociologically relevant dimensions, e.g. sex, ethnicity and social class. Existing research, however, mostly focuses on one dimension at a time. But people are inherently multidimensional, have many attributes and are members of multiple groups. In this article, we explore such multidimensionality further in the context of network dynamics. Are friendship ties increasingly likely to emerge and persist when individuals have an increasing number of attributes in common? We analyze eleven friendship networks of adolescents, draw on stochastic actor-oriented network models and focus on the interaction of established homophily effects. Our results indicate that main effects for homophily on various dimensions are positive. At the same time, the interaction of these homophily effects is negative. There seems to be a diminishing effect for having more than one attribute in common. We conclude that studies of homophily and friendship formation need to address such multidimensionality further.

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