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Innovation in networks week 2

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Title: Innovation in networks week 2


1
Innovation in networks week 2
  • Social capital, closure,
  • and structural holes
  • Chris Snijders
  • c.c.p.snijders_at_tm.tue.nl

2
Innovation? (something new)
3
Innovation and social network theory
  • How do innovations come into being? ? this weeks
    emphasis
  • What happens with innovations?a) How and when do
    they spread (adoption)?b) How and when are they
    used?
  • Which consequences do innovations have? (for
    individuals, markets, organizations, companies,
    society, )
  • Claim
  • Social Network Analysis (SNA) provides crucial
    insights for the answers
  • to all three (groups of) questions!

4
Any experience? (MGO2, STI3, )
  • Theory
  • social capital
  • weak vs strong ties (Granovetter)
  • structural holes (Burt)
  • closure (Coleman)
  • (small world networks / the Kevin Bacon effect)
  • Techniques
  • data collection through surveys
  • network measures
  • Ucinet or other programs used to grind network
    data
  • SPSS or other general statistics programs to deal
    with data
  • Application of the above to a specific (own) topic

5
Before I forget
  • As does most good science, we (want you to)
    work with the Problem-Theory-Observation cycle
  • Define your research Problem formulation
  • Think about a general answer to this problem a
    Theory
  • Test you theory on the basis of Observation
  • (which leads to new Problem formulations)
  • First couple of weeks all theory.
  • Note this does not imply that you should
    believe what other researchers have claimed is
    all true! It is all empirically testable though.

6
Social networks dots with lines or arrows in
between
  • Examples
  • unit (dot) type of
    relationship
  • (line or arrow)
  • pupils of a school class
    friendship
  • employees of a company communication,
    authority relation
  • members of a local community membership in
    the same club
  • companies
    business relationship

7
Topics of today
  • Classic readings in social network analysis
  • Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
    capital
  • Burt Structural holes versus network closure as
    social capital
  • Granovetter The strength of weak ties
    (revisited)
  • Keywords
  • Social capital
  • Closure
  • Structural holes
  • Weak ties, strong ties

8
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital
  • Social capital vs human capital
  • (or, as some say sociology vs economics)
  • Empirical analysis
  • To explain school dropouts
  • Network actors pupils and their parents
  • Network ties having frequent contact with

9
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (2)
  • SEVERAL DEFINITIONS OF SOCIAL CAPITAL
  • OF A PERSON
  • The resources you can mobilize through others
  • The value of social networks that people can draw
    on to solve common problems. The benefits of
    social capital flow from the trust, reciprocity,
    information, and cooperation associated with
    social networks.
  • OF A SOCIETY
  • The attitude, spirit and willingness of people to
    engage in collective, civic activities the
    social infrastructure
  • A "composite measure" which reflects both the
    breadth and depth of civic community (staying
    informed about community life and
  • participating in its associations) as well as
    the public's
  • participation in political life
  • people tend to say that nowadays social capital
    is declining in Western societies
  • The collective value of all social networks

10
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (2)
  • Human capital the competencies and resources
    you have available yourself (e.g., wealth,
    intelligence, education, experience, )
  • Social capital the resources you can mobilize
    through others the way in which your
    connections to others facilitate achieving ones
    goals
  • Note
  • Human capital can be social. For instance
    having good social skills is an example of human
    capital.
  • Social capital need not be social. For
    instance a firm in a network of business partners

11
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (3)
  • General background there were two classical
    streams of thought
  • One should consider the behavior of rational
    individuals trying to optimize their utility (and
    utility money) ? economics
  • Individuals are at the mercy of social conditions
  • Two new streams emerge, creating a convergence
    between sociology and economics
  • Effects of social conditions on economic action
  • - For instance Baker (1983) about the Chicago
    Options Exchange
  • Understanding social behavior as a consequence of
    rational action
  • - For instance Becker (1991) on behavior in the
    family A treatise on the family
  • Coleman is somewhere in between the latter two
    streams.
  • His best known work Foundations of social theory
    (1990)
  • Born 1926, died 1995
  • 1966 Coleman Report. Large datasets on schools
    and racial segregation.
  • The study suggested that busing might be a
    good idea.
  • 1974 New data showed that busing lead to
    emigration of whites from
  • their neighborhood, and Coleman
    changed his opinion.

12
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (4)
  • Two of Colemans social capital examples
  • Raising kids in Jerusalem vs in Detroit
  • The diamond merchants
  • Compare
  • Diego Gambettas 1996 The sicilian mafia
  • (? social capital need not be good for society)
  • Putnams Bowling alone Social capital is
    declining
  • in the US (and according to him, this has
    something
  • to do with privatization and television)

13
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (5)
  • Social capital (of a society or group) consists
    of
  • Obligations and expectations
  • El Khalili market in Cairo
  • Private credit organizations (e.g., Chinese
    restaurants in NL)
  • Channels of information
  • Granovetter Strength of weak ties
  • Norms about what (not) to do
  • all kinds of collective action problems can then
    be solved
  • (Dutch government Postbus 51)
  • Dutch example code Tabaksblat, a commission on
    corporate governance restricting the use of huge
    bonuses in the business world
  • For 1. and 3. you need closure (dense networks
    between actors / connections between your ties)
    or ensure it through social organization. Note
    that Coleman is less clear about the need of
    closure for 2.

14
Coleman Social capital in the creation of human
capital (6)
  • Social capital (of parents) can lead to human
    capital (of children)
  • Empirical analysis
  • To explain school dropouts
  • Network actors pupils and their parents
  • Network ties having frequent contact with
  • To do well in school, you need
  • Financial capital (physical resources)
  • Human capital (cognitive environment)
  • AND Social capital (access to human capital)
  • Coleman argues that social capital really helps
    pupils. Pupils whose parents spend more time on
    them, tend to be in Catholic schools parents
    know each other from church related meetings, or
    have stayed in the same neighborhood parents
    know each other better, indeed drop out less
    often.
  • Note social capital can be a collective good
    (or at least at odds with what one would
    generally want). Example stable neighborhoods.

15
Ron BurtStructural holes versus network closure
as social capital
  • Burts conclusion
  • structural holes beat network closure
  • when it comes to predicting which actor
  • performs best
  • Coleman says closure is good
  • Because information goes around fast
  • and it facilitates trust
  • fear of a damaged reputation
  • precludes opportunistic behavior
  • He subsequently compares people with
  • dense networks with those with
  • networks rich in structural holes

University of Chicago graduate school of business
16
Social organization (Fig 1 in the paper)
Structural holes create value
A
B
1
7
3
2
James
Robert
4
5
6
  • Robert will do better than James, because of
  • informational benefits
  • tertius gaudens (entrepreneur)

C
17
Structural holes / Redundancy
  • It is not that clear (yet) what precisely
    constitutes a structural hole.
  • But Burt does define two kinds of redundancy in a
    network
  • Cohesion two of your contacts have a close
    connection
  • Structurally equivalent contacts contacts who
    link to the same third parties
  • This more or less corresponds to the inverse of
    structural holes
  • If two of your contacts are connected, you do not
    connect a structural hole
  • If two of your contacts lead to the same other,
    then to get to that other, you actually would
    have needed only one of those contacts

18
Structural holes vs network closure
  • Empirical evidence on
  • Dependent variable early promotion
  • large bonus
  • outstanding evaluation
  • Most or all of the evidence seems to favor
    Burts structural holes
  • Burt on Coleman
  • Colemans dependent variable dropping out of
    school
  • parents in a close network
  • ? smaller probability of school dropout of
    children
  • ? but parents may tend to earn less
  • And about network closure
  • Best team performance when groups are cohesive
    but team
  • members have diverse external contacts.

19
Structural holes vs network closure
  • Coleman
  • closure can overcome trust and cooperation
    problems
  • (empirical evidence from data on school
    dropouts)
  • Burt
  • Structural holes give entrepreneurial
    possibilities
  • (empirical evidence from data on US managers)
  • Perhaps this is not so much a controversy after
    all ?
  • There is a problem though, when it comes to
    innovation. For successful innovation one needs
    both to overcome trust and cooperation problems
    and entrepreneurial possibilities.

20
Mark Granovetter The strength of weak ties
  • Dept of Sociology, Harvard
  • The strength of weak ties (1973)
  • Granovetter was a sociology graduate student
    interviewed about 100 people who had changed jobs
    in the Boston area.
  • More than half of the people found their new job
    through personal contacts (already at odds with
    standard economics).
  • Many of these contacts were rather indirect (a
    weak tie)
  • This is surprising, because strong ties are
    usually more willing to help you out
  • Granovetters conjecture your strong ties are
    more likely to contain information you already
    know
  • According to Granovetter you need a network that
    is low on transitivity

21
Mark Granovetter The strength of weak ties
revisited
  • You need weak ties because they give you better
    access to information
  • Coser (1975) You need bridging weak ties weak
    ties that connect to groups outside your own
    clique ( you need cognitive flexibility, because
    you need to cope with heterogeneity of ties)
  • Empirical evidence
  • Granovetter (1974) 28 found job through weak
    ties
  • 17 found job through strong ties
  • Langlois (1977) showed this result depends on the
    kind of job
  • Blau added arguments about high status people
    connecting to a more diverse set of people than
    low status people
  • see Granovetters paper

22
Mark Granovetterother work
  • Granovetter is well known for the notion of
  • (social) embeddedness
  • all behavior occurs in a social structure, and
    that structure has
  • influence on behavior.
  • Institutional embeddedness
  • shared rules and norms
  • example two firms in an alliance, working under
    different judicial systems
  • Temporal embeddedness
  • the existence of past relations and anticipated
    future relations.
  • example two firms in an alliance who have
    worked together before, vs not
  • example two firms in an alliance who anticipate
    future dealings, vs not
  • Structural embeddedness
  • the existence of relations with third parties
  • example two firms in an alliance have mutual
    customers, vs not

23
Good theory should be portable
  • COLEMAN
  • Dependent variable school dropout
  • Network actors pupils parents
  • Network ties (frequency of) contact
  • Closure leads to less dropouts
  • BURT
  • Dependent variable success in firms
  • Network actors managers in a firm
  • Network ties several kinds (see Burts paper)
  • Managers with networks rich in structural holes
    do better.

24
Good theory should be portable
  • Dependent variable success in this class
  • Network actors ?
  • Network ties ?
  • Students with which kinds of networks perform
    best? Based on which arguments?
  • Dependent variable success of an RD-alliance
  • Network actors ?
  • Network ties ?
  • Alliances with which kinds of networks perform
    best? Based on which arguments?
  • Alternatives innovative succes of a department
    in a university
  • innovativeness of the RD-department of a firm

25
Read Coleman, Granovetter, and Burt
  • Get acquianted with the research that was done in
    these papers
  • Think about how the kinds of mechanisms as used
    in these papers can be useful for other problem
    formulations

26
What will be next?
  • ltsome more theory on social networksgt
  • Closure, redundancy, structural holes, etc
  • These can be made more concrete.

27
The small world phenomenon Milgram (1967)
  • Milgram sent packages to a couple hundred people
    in Nebraska and Kansas.
  • Aim was get this package to ltaddress of person
    in Bostongt
  • Rule only send this package to someone whom you
    know on a first name basis. Try to make the chain
    as short as possible.
  • Result average length of chain is only six
  • six degrees of separation. (we are all
    connected)
  • Is this really true?
  • Milgram used only part of the data, actually the
    ones supporting his claim
  • Many packages did not end up at the Boston
    address
  • Follow up studies all small scale

28
The small world phenomenon (cont.)
  • Small world project is testing this assertion
    as we speak (http//smallworld.columbia.edu), you
    can still participate
  • Email to ltaddressgt, otherwise same rules.
    Addresses were American college professor, Indian
    technology consultant, Estonian archival
    inspector,
  • Conclusion
  • Low completion rate (384 out of 24163 1.5)
  • Succesful chains more often through professional
    ties
  • Succesful chains more often through weak ties
    (weak ties mentioned about 10 more often)
  • Chain size 5, 6 or 7.

29
The Kevin Bacon experiment Tjaden (/-1996)
  • Actors actors Ties has played in a movie
    with
  • Research implications of the small world
    phenomenon
  • are not yet understood very well
  • it leads to diffusion that is faster than
    expected (disease, innovation, fashion)
  • And it may be good news for sustaining
    cooperation
  • Small world networks have
  • short average distance between pairs
  • but relatively high cliquishness

30
The Kevin Bacon game
  • Can be played at
  • http//www.cs.virginia.edu/oracle/
  • Kevin Bacon
  • number
  • Rutger Hauer (NL) 2 Jackie Burroughs
  • Famke Janssen (NL) 2 Donna Goodhand
  • Kl.M. Brandauer (AU) 2 Robert Redford
  • Arn. Schwarzenegger 2 Kevin Pollak
  • Franka Potente (D) 2 Benjamin Bratt
  • Marlene Dietrich (D) 2 Max. Schell
  • Pascal Ulli (CH) 3 Felsenheimer, Lloyd
    Kaufman
  • Bruno Ganz (CH) 2 Aidan Quinn

31
How good a center is ?
  • Average distance to other
  • actors in Internet Movie db
  • Rutger Hauer (NL) 2.81
  • Famke Janssen (NL) 3.04
  • Kl.M. Brandauer (AU) 2.96
  • Arn. Schwarzenegger 2.87
  • Franka Potente (D) 2.94
  • Marlene Dietrich (D) 3.03
  • Pascal Ulli (CH) 3.92
  • Bruno Ganz (CH) 2.93
  • Marc. Mastroianni (IT) 2.87
  • Kevin Bacon 2.94
  • Robert de Niro 2.77 at place 28
  • Al Pacino 2.87

32
The top 20 centers in the IMDB
  • Steiger, Rod (2.67)
  • Lee, Christopher (2.68)
  • Hopper, Dennis (2.69)
  • Sutherland, Donald (2.70)
  • Keitel, Harvey (2.70)
  • Pleasence, Donald (2.70)
  • von Sydow, Max (2.70)
  • Caine, Michael (I) (2.72)
  • Sheen, Martin (2.72)
  • Quinn, Anthony (2.72)
  • Heston, Charlton (2.72)
  • Hackman, Gene (2.72)
  • Connery, Sean (2.73)
  • Stanton, Harry Dean (2.73)
  • Welles, Orson (2.74)
  • Mitchum, Robert (2.74)
  • Gould, Elliott (2.74)
  • Plummer, Christopher (2.74)
  • Coburn, James (2.74)

NB Bacon is at place 1049
33
Elvis has left the building
34
Connect the unconnectable
35
Small world networks so what?
  • You see it a lot around us for instance in road
    maps, food chains, electric power grids,
    metabolite processing networks, neural networks,
    telephone call graphs and social influence
    networks ? may be useful to study them
  • We (can try to) create it
  • see Hyves, openBC, etc
  • They seem to be useful for a lot
  • of things, and there are reasons
  • to believe they might be useful
  • for innovation purposes

36
Social networking websites (sept06)
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