4.4 Article

Baseline Models for Two-Mode Social Network Data

Journal

POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 458-491

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1541-0072.2012.00461.x

Keywords

social networks; two-mode data; hypothesis tests; quadratic assignment procedure; conditional uniform graph tests; exponential random graph models

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Baseline models have been used in the analysis of social networks as a way to understand how empirical networks differ from random ones. For the purposes of social network analysis, a random network is one chosenat randomfrom a population of possible graphs derived from a given generating function. Although these principled hypothesis tests have a long history, many of their properties and extensions to multiple data structureshere, specifically two-mode datahave been overlooked. This article focused on applications of different baseline models to two data sets: donations and voting of the 111th U.S. Congress, and organizations involved in forums on watershed policy in San Francisco, USA. Tests using each data set, but with different baseline reference distributions, will illustrate the range of possible questions baseline models can address and the differences between them. The ability to apply different models and generate a constellation of results provides a deeper understanding of the structure of the system.

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