Social networks are organized into communities with dense internal connections, giving rise to high values of the clustering coefficient. In addition, these networks have been observed to be assortative, i.e. highly connected vertices tend to connect to other highly connected vertices, and have steep degree distributions. We present a model for an undirected growing network which reproduces these characteristics, with the aim of producing efficiently very large networks to be used as platforms for studying sociodynamic phenomena. The communities arise from a mixture of random attachment and implicit preferential attachment. The structural properties of the model are studied analytically and numerically, using the k-clique method for quantif...
We introduce an intuitive model that describes both the emergence of community structure and the evo...
In this Brief Report we present a version of a network growth model, generalized in order to describ...
The interactions among human beings represent the backbone of our societies. How people establish ne...
Social networks are organized into communities with dense internal connections, giving rise to high ...
Abstract Recent interest in complex systems and specially social networks has catalyzed the developm...
Many social and biological networks consist of communities—groups of nodes within which connections ...
The problem of modeling complex social networks is considered from three perspectives: The problem o...
Abstract: We propose a new model of social network growth. This model bases on the followi...
Over the years network theory has proven to be rapidly expanding method-ology to investigate various...
For the purpose of prediction analysis of customer relationships in social networks, this paper prop...
The problem of modeling complex social networks is considered from three per-spectives: The problem ...
We propose a class of models of social network formation based on a mathematical abstraction of the ...
We describe and develop three recent novelties in network research which are particularly useful for...
How does a social network evolve? Sociologists have studied this question for many years. According ...
International audienceRecent years have seen a growing interest in the modeling and simulation of so...
We introduce an intuitive model that describes both the emergence of community structure and the evo...
In this Brief Report we present a version of a network growth model, generalized in order to describ...
The interactions among human beings represent the backbone of our societies. How people establish ne...
Social networks are organized into communities with dense internal connections, giving rise to high ...
Abstract Recent interest in complex systems and specially social networks has catalyzed the developm...
Many social and biological networks consist of communities—groups of nodes within which connections ...
The problem of modeling complex social networks is considered from three perspectives: The problem o...
Abstract: We propose a new model of social network growth. This model bases on the followi...
Over the years network theory has proven to be rapidly expanding method-ology to investigate various...
For the purpose of prediction analysis of customer relationships in social networks, this paper prop...
The problem of modeling complex social networks is considered from three per-spectives: The problem ...
We propose a class of models of social network formation based on a mathematical abstraction of the ...
We describe and develop three recent novelties in network research which are particularly useful for...
How does a social network evolve? Sociologists have studied this question for many years. According ...
International audienceRecent years have seen a growing interest in the modeling and simulation of so...
We introduce an intuitive model that describes both the emergence of community structure and the evo...
In this Brief Report we present a version of a network growth model, generalized in order to describ...
The interactions among human beings represent the backbone of our societies. How people establish ne...