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Social Networks, Volume 29
Volume 29, Number 1, January 2007
- Karl E. Bauman, Robert W. Faris, Susan T. Ennett, Andrea M. Hussong, Vangie A. Foshee:
Adding valued data to social network measures: Does it add to associations with adolescent substance use? 1-10 - Elisabeth L. Terhell, Marjolein I. Broese van Groenou, Theo van Tilburg:
Network contact changes in early and later postseparation years. 11-24 - Matthijs Kalmijn, Jeroen K. Vermunt:
Homogeneity of social networks by age and marital status: A multilevel analysis of ego-centered networks. 25-43 - jimi adams, James Moody:
To tell the truth: Measuring concordance in multiply reported network data. 44-58 - Carl Nordlund:
Identifying regular blocks in valued networks: A heuristic applied to the St. Marks carbon flow data, and international trade in cereal products. 59-69 - Trevor I. Fenner, Mark Levene, George Loizou:
A model for collaboration networks giving rise to a power-law distribution with an exponential cutoff. 70-80 - Philip A. Sinclair:
A representation for the Mexican political networks. 81-92 - James Stiller, Robin I. M. Dunbar:
Perspective-taking and memory capacity predict social network size. 93-104 - Ales Ziberna:
Generalized blockmodeling of valued networks. 105-126 - John W. McDonald, Peter W. F. Smith, Jonathan J. Forster:
Markov chain Monte Carlo exact inference for social networks. 127-136 - Soong Moon Kang:
A note on measures of similarity based on centrality. 137-142 - Carlo Morselli, Cynthia Giguère, Katia Petit:
The efficiency/security trade-off in criminal networks. 143-153
- Thomas W. Valente:
Networks and Public Health: A Review of Network Epidemiology: A Handbook for Survey Design and Data Collection, M. Morris (Ed.). Oxford University Press, New York (2004). 154-159 - David B. Tindall:
From metaphors to mechanisms: Critical issues in networks and social movements research. 160-168
Volume 29, Number 2, May 2007
- Garry Robins, Martina Morris:
Advances in exponential random graph (p*) models. 169-172 - Garry Robins, Pip Pattison, Yuval Kalish, Dean Lusher:
An introduction to exponential random graph (p*) models for social networks. 173-191 - Garry Robins, Tom A. B. Snijders, Peng Wang, Mark S. Handcock, Philippa Pattison:
Recent developments in exponential random graph (p*) models for social networks. 192-215 - David R. Hunter:
Curved exponential family models for social networks. 216-230 - Steven M. Goodreau:
Advances in exponential random graph (p*) models applied to a large social network. 231-248
- Frank Tutzauer:
Entropy as a measure of centrality in networks characterized by path-transfer flow. 249-265 - Marcel A. L. M. van Assen, Arnout van de Rijt:
Dynamic exchange networks. 266-278 - David C. Bell, Benedetta Belli-McQueen, Ali Haider:
Partner naming and forgetting: Recall of network members. 279-299 - Christopher McCarty, Peter D. Killworth, James Rennell:
Impact of methods for reducing respondent burden on personal network structural measures. 300-315
- Mario Diani:
The relational element in Charles Tilly's recent (and not so recent) work. 316-323 - José Luis Molina:
The Development of Social Network Analysis in the Spanish-Speaking World: A Spanish Chronicle, version 2b, J.L. Molina (2006). 324-329 - Amalya L. Oliver, Yuval Kalish, Gad Yair:
Reflections on "Brokerage and Closure". 330-339 - James Moody:
The Sexual Organization of the City, E.O. Laumann, S. Ellingson, J. Mahay, A. Paik, Y. Youm (Eds.). University of Chicago Press (2004). 340-348
Volume 29, Number 3, July 2007
- Barry Wellman:
The network is personal: Introduction to a special issue of Social Networks. 349-356 - Susan Bastani:
Family comes first: Men's and women's personal networks in Tehran. 357-374 - Marina Hennig:
Re-evaluating the Community Question from a German perspective. 375-390 - Michel Grossetti:
Are French networks different? 391-404 - Gabriele Plickert, Rochelle R. Côté, Barry Wellman:
It's not who you know, it's how you know them: Who exchanges what with whom? 405-429 - Diana Mok, Barry Wellman, Ranu Basu:
Did distance matter before the Internet?: Interpersonal contact and support in the 1970s. 430-461
- Daniel J. Brass:
Review of Peter Monge and Nosh Contractor's book on Theories of Network Organization. 463-466 - Thomas W. Valente:
Corrigendum to "Networks and public health: A review of network epidemiology: A handbook for survey design and data collection" [Social Networks 29 (2007) 154-159]. 467
Volume 29, Number 4, October 2007
- Jessica A. Crowe:
In search of a happy medium: How the structure of interorganizational networks influence community economic development strategies. 469-488 - Miranda J. Lubbers, Tom A. B. Snijders:
A comparison of various approaches to the exponential random graph model: A reanalysis of 102 student networks in school classes. 489-507 - Davide Barrera:
The impact of negotiated exchange on trust and trustworthiness. 508-526 - Silvia Snidero, Bruno Morra, Roberto Corradetti, Dario Gregori:
Use of the scale-up methods in injury prevention research: An empirical assessment to the case of choking in children. 527-538 - Sara Y. Del Valle, James Mac Hyman, Herbert W. Hethcote, Stephen G. Eubank:
Mixing patterns between age groups in social networks. 539-554 - Phillip Bonacich:
Some unique properties of eigenvector centrality. 555-564 - James D. Montgomery:
The structure of norms and relations in patronage systems. 565-584 - Soong Moon Kang:
Equicentrality and network centralization: A micro-macro linkage. 585-601
- Carter T. Butts:
Carrington, P.J., Scott, J., Wasserman, S., 2005. Models and Methods in Social Network Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 603-608 - Donald Steiny:
Identity and Control, 2nd ed., H. White. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008). 609-616
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