Actions

CSSS 2009 Santa Fe-Final Papers

From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki

Revision as of 02:11, 24 August 2009 by Maoforero86 (talk | contribs)
CSSS Santa Fe 2009

The Effect of Gossip on Social Networks

Summary: In this project we look at the effects of the spread of gossip (defined as information passed between two individuals A and B about an individual C who is not present) on social network structure.

Members (Group Page): Allison Shaw, Chang Yu, David Brooks, Milena Tsvetkova, Roozbeh Daneshvar

Deconstructing CSSS09 Social Network

Summary: CSSS09 is a group of people interested in complex systems who are randomly chosen to attend the one month summer school. The international and interdisciplinary group spends four weeks together learning, discussing and working on projects related to complex systems. We are analyzing the social interaction of this network and the network change over time.

Members: Margreth Keiler, Murad Mithani, Roozbeh Daneshvar, Wendy Ham

Analyzing Contagion in Heterogeneous Networks

Summary: Using the real-life data for the flu shots "contagion", and generating an agent based model, the project intends to analyze contagion in a network in which all the nodes have various levels of threshold for changing. The project intends to investigate if the thresholds are various, can that lead to new behaviors in group level? Also includes an analytical analysis and investigation of dynamics of disease spreading in view of immunity-wise classification of regions/clusters.

Members: Roozbeh Daneshvar, Lara Danilova-Burdess, Karen Simpson, Jeremy Barofsky, Varsha Kulkarni

The Effect of Disaggregation on Infection Spreading in a social network: 'More' may not be 'Merrier'

Summary: This project analyzes the dynamics of infection spreading in the disaggregated framework of a social network using prevalence data for different countries.

By: Varsha Kulkarni

Mom made me do it: Division of labor via maternal effects

Summary: We explore an alternative to cooperation for the evolution of division of labor (maternal manipulation) by means of an individual-based model.

By: Mauricio Gonzalez-Forero, Mareen Hofmann