Speaker
From InterSciWiki
Contents |
[edit] Click below for powerpoint, abstract and other information on the next speaker
Nov 13 12:40-2:20 Phil Bonacich, UCLA: Sociology. Power and Exploitation in Exchange Networks: A Social-Psychological Model.
[edit] Subscribe
Subscribe to 4c-multicampus complexity listserve --- back to University of California Multi-Campus Complexity Events 2009-2010
[edit] Following Speaker
- Doug White Friday, January 15 2010 Multiscale/Multilevel Progeny Networks: Progenerative causal and evolutionary analysis .
Abstracts and Maps for directions to the vidconf sites:
- Interactive UCI Campus Map
- Click each image twice to enlarge.
[edit] TitleThe genetic basis of human social networks [edit] AbstractSocial networks exhibit strikingly systematic patterns across a wide range of human contexts. While genetic variation accounts for a significant portion of the variation in many complex social behaviors, the heritability of egocentric social network attributes is unknown. Here we show that three of these attributes (in-degree, transitivity, and centrality) are heritable. We then develop a "mirror network" method to test extant network models and show that none accounts for observed genetic variation in human social networks. We propose an alternative "Attract and Introduce" model with two simple forms of heterogeneity that generates significant heritability as well as other important network features. We show that the model is well suited to real social networks in humans. These results suggest that natural selection may have played a role in the evolution of social networks. They also suggest that modeling intrinsic variation in network attributes may be important for understanding the way genes affect human behaviors and the way these behaviors spread from person to person. ... continued on main site at Todd Presner |



