Abstract Many empirical studies have shown that in social, citation, collaboration, and other types of networks in real world, the degree of almost every node is less than the average degree of its neighbors. This imbalance is well known in sociology as the friendship paradox and states that your friends are more popular than you on average. If we introduce a value equal to the ratio of the average degree of the neighbors for a certain node to the degree of this node (which is called the ‘friendship index’, FI), then the FI value of more than 1 for most nodes indicates the presence of the friendship paradox in the network. In this paper, we study the behavior of the FI over time for networks generated by growth network models. We will focus...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
One of the best-known models in network science is the preferential attachment model, which generate...
Our friends have more friends than we do. That is the basis of the friendship paradox. In mathematic...
Abstract. The friendship paradox is a sociological phenomenon stating that most people have fewer fr...
Abstract. The friendship paradox refers to the sociological observation that, while the people’s ass...
The friendship paradox is a sociological phenomenon first discovered by Feld [13] which states that ...
One of the interesting phenomena due to topological heterogeneities in complex networks is the frien...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
The friendship paradox states that your friends have on average more friends than you have. Does the...
The friendship paradox states that your friends have on average more friends than you have. Does the...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
One of the best-known models in network science is the preferential attachment model, which generate...
Our friends have more friends than we do. That is the basis of the friendship paradox. In mathematic...
Abstract. The friendship paradox is a sociological phenomenon stating that most people have fewer fr...
Abstract. The friendship paradox refers to the sociological observation that, while the people’s ass...
The friendship paradox is a sociological phenomenon first discovered by Feld [13] which states that ...
One of the interesting phenomena due to topological heterogeneities in complex networks is the frien...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
One of the best-known models in network science is preferential attachment. In this model, the proba...
The friendship paradox states that your friends have on average more friends than you have. Does the...
The friendship paradox states that your friends have on average more friends than you have. Does the...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
The friendship paradox is the observation that friends of individuals tend to have more friends or b...
One of the best-known models in network science is the preferential attachment model, which generate...
Our friends have more friends than we do. That is the basis of the friendship paradox. In mathematic...