 

#  Damon Centola on 'Diffusion in Social Networks' 

 





October 15, 2007

 

 

The applied statistics workshop is back for another exciting installment. This week we have Damon Centola, RWJ Scholar, Harvard University presenting 'Diffusion in Social Networks: New Theory and Experiments' . Damon provided the following abstract for his talk:

The strength of weak ties is that they tend to be long – they connect  
socially distant locations. Research on “small worlds” shows that these  
long ties can dramatically reduce the “degrees of separation” of a  
social network, thereby allowing ideas and behaviors to rapidly diffuse.  
However, I show that the opposite can also be true. Increasing the  
frequency of long ties in a clustered social network can also inhibit  
the diffusion of collective behavior across a population. For health  
related behaviors that require strong social reinforcement, such as  
dieting, exercising, smoking, or even condom use, successful diffusion  
may depend primarily on the width of bridges between otherwise distant  
locations, not just their length. I present formal and computational  
results that demonstrate these findings, and then propose an  
experimental design for empirically testing the effects of social  
network topology on the diffusion of health behavior.

The workshop is held on Wednesday at 12 noon in room N 354, CGIS Knafel (1737 Cambridge St). And a light lunch will be served.

Posted by [Justin Grimmer](http://www.iq.harvard.edu/blog/sss/archives/author/justin-grimmer/) at [ 5:59 PM](http://www.iq.harvard.edu/blog/sss/archives/2007/10/damon_centola_o.shtml)



 

 

 



 

 

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