In this paper we define a metric for reciprocity—the degree of balance in a social relationship—appropriate for weighted social networks in order to investigate the distribution of this dyadic feature in a large-scale system built from trace-logs of over a billion cell-phone communication events across millions of actors. We find that dyadic relations in this network are characterized by much larger degrees of imbalance than we would expect if persons kept only those relationships that exhibited close to full reciprocity. We point to two structural features of human communication behavior and relationship formation—the division of contacts into strong and weak ties and the tendency to form relationships with similar others—that either help ...
We analyze a large-scale mobile phone call dataset containing information on the age, gender, and bi...
Social relationships play a crucial role in shaping daily conversations and information sharing with...
This paper investigates the dynamic relation between callers' social ties and their wireless phone s...
We present a study of the reciprocity of human behaviour based on mobile phone usage records. The un...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Many social, technological, and biological interactions involve network relationships whose outcome ...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
While most social network research focuses on positive relational ties, such as friendship and infor...
Tie strengths in social networks are heterogeneous, with strong and weak ties playing different role...
There is a longstanding belief that in social networks with simultaneous friendly and hostile intera...
Mobile phone communication as digital service generates ever-increasing datasets of human communica...
doi:10.1088/1367-2630/9/6/179 Abstract. We construct a connected network of 3.9 million nodes from m...
Abstract Social networks are made out of strong and weak ties having very different structural and d...
In directed networks, reciprocal links have dramatic effects on dynamical processes, network growth,...
In this study, we first explore whether individuals with the greatest number of weak ties to others ...
We analyze a large-scale mobile phone call dataset containing information on the age, gender, and bi...
Social relationships play a crucial role in shaping daily conversations and information sharing with...
This paper investigates the dynamic relation between callers' social ties and their wireless phone s...
We present a study of the reciprocity of human behaviour based on mobile phone usage records. The un...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
Many social, technological, and biological interactions involve network relationships whose outcome ...
Human interpersonal communications drive political, technological, and economic systems, placing imp...
While most social network research focuses on positive relational ties, such as friendship and infor...
Tie strengths in social networks are heterogeneous, with strong and weak ties playing different role...
There is a longstanding belief that in social networks with simultaneous friendly and hostile intera...
Mobile phone communication as digital service generates ever-increasing datasets of human communica...
doi:10.1088/1367-2630/9/6/179 Abstract. We construct a connected network of 3.9 million nodes from m...
Abstract Social networks are made out of strong and weak ties having very different structural and d...
In directed networks, reciprocal links have dramatic effects on dynamical processes, network growth,...
In this study, we first explore whether individuals with the greatest number of weak ties to others ...
We analyze a large-scale mobile phone call dataset containing information on the age, gender, and bi...
Social relationships play a crucial role in shaping daily conversations and information sharing with...
This paper investigates the dynamic relation between callers' social ties and their wireless phone s...