| Literature DB >> 31930177 |
Maximilian Sadilek1, Peter Klimek1,2, Stefan Thurner1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Social interactions take place simultaneously through different interaction types, such as communication, friendship, trade, exchange, enmity, revenge, etc. These interactions can be conveniently described with time-dependent multi-layer networks. Little is known about the dynamics of social network formation on single layers. How the dynamics on one layer is coupled to and influences the dynamics on another layer is a completely unexplored territory. This is mainly due to the lack of comprehensive microscopic interaction data on time-dependent multi-layer networks. In this work, we study a unique dataset of 350,000 odd players in a massive multi-player online game, for which we know practically every social interaction event. We focus on the dynamics of friendship interactions and how they are coupled to the dynamics of enmity interactions. We are able to identify the driving processes behind the joint network formation of friendship and enmity links. The essential mechanisms turn out to be specific triadic closure rules. We propose a simple dynamical model that allows us to predict not only the correct levels of social balance but also the detailed simultaneous structural properties of the friendship and enmity networks, including their degree distributions, clustering coefficients and nearest neighbor degrees. While the formation of new friendship links can be largely understood on the basis of structural features of the friendship network alone, this is not true for enmity networks. The formation of enmity links is driven by the need to socially balance triadic relations that contain negative and positive interactions. Networks of enmity relations can only be understood structurally in the context of the positive social ties they are embedded in.Keywords: Co-evolution; Multi-layer network; Social balance; Social network formation; Triadic closure
Year: 2017 PMID: 31930177 PMCID: PMC6936344 DOI: 10.1007/s42001-017-0010-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comput Soc Sci
Fig. 1Snapshot of a two-layer social network of friendship (green arrows) and enmity (red arrows) relations. Each pair of nodes (grey circles) connected by a dashed line represents a single individual
Fig. 2Driving processes behind two-layer social network formation, based on the numerical analysis of coupled friendship and enmity networks obtained from the massive multiplayer online game PARDUS. a Schematic illustration of all possible types of triadic closure processes, given that friendship links are reciprocal and enmity links are uni-directional. Shown on the left (right) are triads that are closed by a friendship (enmity) link, the respective positions of the closing links are indicated by the dashed lines. b Relative frequencies of triadic closure processes when new friendship (left) respectively enmity (right) links are created. Note that the rates do not add up to one because several triads can be closed simultaneously. c Fractions of links that are actively deleted by players. While friendship links (green) primarily disappear from the network because a player leaves the game, enmity links (red) are often actively withdrawn
Fig. 3Properties of the coupled two-layer friendship (left) and enmity (right) networks obtained from the PARDUS data (grey) and model simulations (green and red): a cumulative distributions of in-degrees () and out-degrees (), b clustering coefficient as a function of degree, c nearest neighbor degree versus degree. To evaluate b and c, the networks were symmetrized