selected topics in data networking explore social networks: sentiments and friendship

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Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

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Page 1: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Selected Topics in Data Networking

Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Page 2: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Introduction

Finding cohesive subgroups within a social network People who belong together tend to interact more

frequently than people who do not.

Relations are either positive or negative Friendship versus hostility, liking versus

disliking.

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Page 3: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Introduction

Expecting positive ties to occur within subgroups and negative ties between subgroups.

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Source: http://boxesandarrows.com/social-networks-and-group-formation/

Page 4: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Sentiment Analysis

Sentiment Analysis: Detecting and understanding how the audience is reacting to a brand, either positively or negatively.

“I love this company“, “this company” is the topic, and the sentiment (as expressed by the verb “love“) is positive.

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Source: http://brnrd.me/social-sentiment-sentiment-analysis/

Page 5: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

Social psychology is interested in group processes and their impact on individual behavior and perceptions.

In the 1940s, Fritz Heider formulated a principle that has become the core of balance theory

Balance Theory is a motivational theory of attitude change.

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Page 6: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Structural Balance

Balance Theory is also useful in examining how celebrity endorsement affects consumers' attitudes toward products. If a person likes a celebrity and perceives that said celebrity likes

a product, said person will tend to like the product more, in order to achieve psychological balance.

If the person already had a dislike for the product being endorsed by the celebrity, they may begin disliking the celebrity, again to achieve psychological balance.

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Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_theory

Page 7: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

Person feels uncomfortable when he or she disagrees with his or her friend on a topic: People feel stressed in a situation of imbalance.

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P is a person, O is another person (the Other), and X represents a topic or object. P likes O, which is indicated by a positive line between P and O, but they disagree on topic X because P is in favor of it (positive line), whereas O is opposed to it (negative line).

Page 8: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

Signed graph: Positive or negative sign is attached to each line

indicating whether the associated tie (e.g., an affection) is positive or negative.

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Source: http://practicalquant.blogspot.com/2011/02/social-networks-evolve-into-two.html

The relationship between two connected nodes can be positive or negative.

Page 9: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

All balanced cycles contain an even number of negative lines or no negative lines at all.

There is one negative line in the cycle, which is an uneven number, so this triple is not balanced. P, and possibly O, will feel stressed in this situation.

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Page 10: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

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Page 11: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

Affective relations do not need to be symmetrical. My feelings for you may differ from your feelings toward

me. Affections are projected from a person to

something or someone else. It is usually better to represent affect ties by arcs rather

than edges. It is easy to generalize balance theory to signed directed

graphs: Ignore the direction of arcs and count the number of

negative arcs in each semicycle (a closed semipath).

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Page 12: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

The sequence of arcs from P to X, on to O, and back to P constitute Semipath and a semicycle but not a path and a cycle,

because not all arcs point toward the next vertex within this sequence.

The semicycle is unbalanced because it contains an uneven number of negative arcs.

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Page 13: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Balance Theory

O’s tie to X is measured from the perspective of P: It is P’s idea about what O thinks of X, which does

not necessarily correspond to O’s real opinion.

In social psychology, this phenomenon is called attribution. O may have positive or negative affect for P, and if X is

a human being (or an animal) rather than a topic, X may also express affections for P and O.

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Page 14: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Structural Balance

Network analysts are interested in the feelings of all members of a group toward each other.

This has led to the notion of structural balance, which expects balance in the overall pattern of affect ties within a human group rather than in one person’s affections and attributions.

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Page 15: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Structural Balance

Balanced signed graph can be partitioned into two clusters

All positive edges connect vertices within the same group

All negative edges connect vertices of the two different groups.

Balanced network is extremely polarized because it consists of two factions and actors only have Positive ties with members of their own faction, Negative ties with members of the other faction.

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Page 16: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Structural Balance

Signed graph is balanced if all of its semicycles are balanced. Find one unbalanced semicycle, the network is

unbalanced.

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Page 17: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Structural Balance

17Source: J. Kunegis, Applications of Structural Balance in Signed Social Networks

Page 18: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Applications of Structural Balance International Relations

International politics represents a setting in which it is natural to assume that a collection of nodes all have opinions (positive or negative) about one another The nodes are nations, + and − labels indicate alliances or animosity

Trust, Distrust, and On-Line Ratings

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Page 19: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

Assignment

Reading Related Article See: Computing global structural balance in

large-scale signed social networks (PNAS, December 27, 2011, vol. 108, no. 52,20953–20958)

Answering Questions See the attached file

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Page 20: Selected Topics in Data Networking Explore Social Networks: Sentiments and Friendship

References

Wouter de Nooy, Andrej Mrvar, and Vladimir Batagelj, Exploratory Social Network Analysis with Pajek, Cambridge

https://courses.cit.cornell.edu/info204_2007sp/balance.pdf

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