Network theory: basic principles (1)
Network theory: basic principles (2)
Network theory: who to study
Knowledge and reality
Reflexivity and biases
100

'Dot' that represents a person/organization

What is vertice/node?

100

Connection between two nodes/vertices

What is edge/tie?

100

A problem that refers to which people/network members are relevant to include in your study

What is boundary specification?

100

The focus of the sociology of knowledge according to Berger and Luckman.

What is the social construction of reality?

200
Vertice/node that is not connected to the network graph

What is isolate?

200

Phenomenon of a friend of a friend becoming your friend; created by, for instance, strong ties.

What is transivity?

200

Involves selecting your network based on particular properties of the relations that people have.

What is relation-based boundary specification?

200

The process by which all human conduct becomes habitualized conduct. Doing things the same way repeatedly without having to think much about it, which is often the most efficient way of doing something.

What is habitualization?

200

The second bias.

What is the field dynamics of the academic world?

300

Birds of a feather flock together.

What is homophily?

300

Ties that you have to other people and what these ties have to offer you.

What is social capital?

300

Involves selecting your research population based on a shared event.

What is event-based boundary specification?

300

Occurs when two or more people share general knowledge/reciprocal typification about habitualized action. 

What is institutionalisation?

300

The first bias.

What is social factors?

400

Source of novel information; bridges between clusters.

What is weak ties?

400

Network clusters that your friends/acquaintances do not have provides an advantage for obtaining novel information.

What is strength of weak ties?

400

Involves selecting people who are members of the same organisational structure.

What is position-based boundary specification?

400

The theoretical argument made by Berger and Luckmann about how two people meet and start the beginnings of a new institution by learning each other's routines and roles.

What is externalisation and objectification?

400

The third bias.

What is intellectualist bias?

500

Theories concerned primarily with describing the mathematical form of social networks.

What is formalist network theories?

500

Theories concerned with how patterns of relations can shed light on substantive topics within their disciplines.

What is structuralist network theories?

500

Social, interactional, and flow.

What is types of relations?

500

Process that occurs in the early phases of a child's socialisation - related to institutions becoming a reality external to the individual.

What is internalisation?