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CSSS 2010 Santa Fe-Project Presentations

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Revision as of 22:30, 24 June 2010 by Bogdanstate (talk | contribs)
CSSS Santa Fe 2010
  • Gossip Theory - Mark Laidre, Megan Olsen, Daniel Jones, Susanne Shultz, Dan MacKinlay, Katarzyna Samson, Erika Fille Legara, Griffith Rees, Massimiliano Spaziani
  • Gossip Empirical Propagation - Mark Laidre, Megan Olsen, Daniel Jones, Susanne Shultz, Dan MacKinlay, Katarzyna Samson, Erika Fille Legara, Griffith Rees, Massimiliano Spaziani
  • Acequias Sarah Wise, John Paul Gonzales, Anne Johnson, Zoe Henscheid, Rajani Shenoy, Ingrid Van Putten, Kim Lewis, Andreas Ligtvoet
  • Self Organization - Louis Lerman
  • Analysis of Heart Rate Variability - Andrew Banooni, Joseph Gran, Shiva Mayer, Borys Wrobel, Neil McCollom
  • Correlations and variability in Pleocene Western US volcanism - Leif Karlstrom, Samuel Scarpino, Griffith Rees, Tracey McDole, Yixian Song
  • Residential Segregation and Friendship Networks - Bruno Abrahao, Pilar Opazo, Zhiyuan Song, Bogdan State

During the past few decades social network analysis has produced a great deal of insight into the workings of social systems. While social scientists have done a great deal of investigative work with regards to residential, friendship, trust, exchange or discussion networks, scientific inquiry has typically limited itself to investigating the characteristics of networks of only one kind. This approach has produced plentiful insight on the structure and function of different kinds of social networks, but the interaction between the different kinds of social networks has received insufficient investigation so far. Our work, in which we examine the interaction of residential and social networks represents an attempt at advancing this field of inquiry. More specifically, we extend a classic model of residential segregation (Schelling, 1968) by incorporating a social network that constructs -- and is influenced by -- residential preferences. We use Agent-Based Modelling to examine how social network topology affects residential segregation in the Schelling model. We start with a semi-static model, where social networks are fixed but the residential network is allowed to vary, after which we proceed to describe the case where both networks evolve in interdependence with each other.

  • Smart Leadership - Jing Li, Massimiliano Spaziani, Andreas Ligtvoet, Erik Van den broecke