fluffymark (
fluffymark) wrote2004-08-22 03:51 pm
Networking the polymonsterwotsitthingy
This may be a little long. I don't know where I'm going in this post yet, but I'll see where I end up. A few ideas of mine are merging with a few threads from here and there. This has given birth to a new idea to chase, and I've got far too much time on my hands today so I'm going to see how far I get before it doesn't make any more sense. Still with me? Then lets start.
How connected are my friends? Through whom did I meet all of you? I've been pondering this (see, I've got way too much time). Following a recent post of
kmazzy's about how she was introduced to most of her friends, I was inspired to write my own list. First I attempted on the computer, but there were too many names and it got confusing so I attempted to put it all together on paper first. With a pencil. And lots of rubbing out and scribbling and crossing out and reassembling and trying to alter the topology of the paper to get everyone to fit. After several attempts, with some guesswork in some places where I've forgotten, there emerged the following diagram of much doom and scariness:

*boggle* I hope thats not too confusing. The above shows through whom I first got to know most of you - those connected directly to me I met without anyone being strongly involved in how we met or got to know you - otherwise you're linked off the person though whom I first met you or really got to know you. Brackets show those without a LJ who I've added because they are important in linkages. As I suspected,
mirabehn and
doseybat are key to introducing me to many people, but its not that simple, is it? It's far more complicated than that, much more than thought it would be (especially compared to
kmazzy's list). Eeeep. The curious thing is, many of those people, even those far separated on my diagram, are linked to each other. I think I'd need a multidimensional piece of paper to draw all of those, so I've not even tried. But have a look - find yourself and see who else you know on the diagram - see how far away some of them are. The interconnectedness is awesome. And downright scary.
This morning, I'd found that
doseybat had pointed me to a very interesting post about small world syndrome by
rho. All the more curious because I've never met her at all, but the name is familiar, she knows some of my friends, and she describes in highly identifiable terms the meta-group of people I know all too well. Which pretty much shows how insidious this group is already. I've known about this meta-group for many years, but I can't think of a good name for it. The polymonsterthingywotsit with tentacles in everyone. Yes, that one.
This goes far beyond the usual small world connectivity of Milgram's well known "6 Degrees of Separation" back in 1967. I'm told this works because of a few nodes with very high connectiveness that hold the whole thing together. That is the main quality of a Scale Free Network - the Internet itself is a good example, and are many social groups, and there are many others - even Heresy is claimed to be a scale free network. But this monster group doesn't behave like that at all. Looking at my above diagram, I can't point at anyone and say they're the highly connected one that holds the group together. Even if theres a major tragedy and the lovely
mirabehn and
doseybat get abducted by aliens, which would sadden me greatly, I wouldn't actually lose connectivity with the rest. The meta-group is not a scale free network. It's far more connected than that. And it doesn't have to be scale-free. Small-worldedness is not a property limited to scale-free networks. Randomly connected networks exhibit the property well. A very enlightening website here provides a good explanation of the Watts-Strogatz model, showing that short path length can even be obtained even with large clustering. And the meta-group path length is very short - 2 or 3 links at most. This may be a good model for this meta-group - but lets see.
The meta-group is a hybridization of many smaller identifiable sub-groups, each with high connectivity individually. I'm always stunned to find that everyone I know from Oxford seems to know everyone else there (it is true - you do know all each other). Similarly with Cambridge. Then theres the goths, the geeks, the role-players, the bisexuals, etc etc. It just so happens that these groups, for whatever reason, have a high degree of correlation and overlap with each other, and so piling all the groups on top of each other, this enhances the connectivity by many orders of magnitude. The whole thing feeds back on itself and gets even stronger and the tentacles reach out further. Even to those of us on the inside it looks like one big conspiracy. The reason it's so strongly connected has a lot to do with the Internet. Although the Internet itself is scale-free, this doesn't stop communities forming online that aren't scale-free. The usual model of social networks assumes a dynamic construction via preferential attachment - people will seek out the already well-connected popular people, which leads to a few nodes being very highly connected. Somehow this model is flawed here - looking at my diagram above at how my own network dynamically grew, there is no sign of preferential attachment, and every sign that people even not close to me are crucial links. I'd propose that the internet allows one to link to lots of nodes and know lots of people, and not just the highly connected nodes, but except for some rare exceptions, the vast majority of people I know I met them in person first and not online. So that can't be right. But the meta-group is still there. I don't know how big it is, and I suspect it would be impossible to map precisely because it is so interconnected. And it can't be the only one - this phenomena must exist elsewhere? I'm not just talking single large connected groups here (for example Christians, or Jews) - I'm thinking meta-groups where several groups overlap.
Thoughts, ideas? Have I completely lost the plot? Or is it all just a conspiracy just to confuse me? Have I just got too much time to think about silly things like this?
How connected are my friends? Through whom did I meet all of you? I've been pondering this (see, I've got way too much time). Following a recent post of

*boggle* I hope thats not too confusing. The above shows through whom I first got to know most of you - those connected directly to me I met without anyone being strongly involved in how we met or got to know you - otherwise you're linked off the person though whom I first met you or really got to know you. Brackets show those without a LJ who I've added because they are important in linkages. As I suspected,
This morning, I'd found that
This goes far beyond the usual small world connectivity of Milgram's well known "6 Degrees of Separation" back in 1967. I'm told this works because of a few nodes with very high connectiveness that hold the whole thing together. That is the main quality of a Scale Free Network - the Internet itself is a good example, and are many social groups, and there are many others - even Heresy is claimed to be a scale free network. But this monster group doesn't behave like that at all. Looking at my above diagram, I can't point at anyone and say they're the highly connected one that holds the group together. Even if theres a major tragedy and the lovely
The meta-group is a hybridization of many smaller identifiable sub-groups, each with high connectivity individually. I'm always stunned to find that everyone I know from Oxford seems to know everyone else there (it is true - you do know all each other). Similarly with Cambridge. Then theres the goths, the geeks, the role-players, the bisexuals, etc etc. It just so happens that these groups, for whatever reason, have a high degree of correlation and overlap with each other, and so piling all the groups on top of each other, this enhances the connectivity by many orders of magnitude. The whole thing feeds back on itself and gets even stronger and the tentacles reach out further. Even to those of us on the inside it looks like one big conspiracy. The reason it's so strongly connected has a lot to do with the Internet. Although the Internet itself is scale-free, this doesn't stop communities forming online that aren't scale-free. The usual model of social networks assumes a dynamic construction via preferential attachment - people will seek out the already well-connected popular people, which leads to a few nodes being very highly connected. Somehow this model is flawed here - looking at my diagram above at how my own network dynamically grew, there is no sign of preferential attachment, and every sign that people even not close to me are crucial links. I'd propose that the internet allows one to link to lots of nodes and know lots of people, and not just the highly connected nodes, but except for some rare exceptions, the vast majority of people I know I met them in person first and not online. So that can't be right. But the meta-group is still there. I don't know how big it is, and I suspect it would be impossible to map precisely because it is so interconnected. And it can't be the only one - this phenomena must exist elsewhere? I'm not just talking single large connected groups here (for example Christians, or Jews) - I'm thinking meta-groups where several groups overlap.
Thoughts, ideas? Have I completely lost the plot? Or is it all just a conspiracy just to confuse me? Have I just got too much time to think about silly things like this?
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I'm intrigued that you have
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PLUS I have met
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Did I really meet you through Sheridan? I had a feeling it was through either Avalon or Verity.
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Yes,
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I'd also point out that the UK Netgoth network links closely to the network you're talking about, but is actually almost entirely separate in its actual social operations.
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Despite having been at Oxford, I'm not really networked with it.
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You may be right that you're the exception to the oxford networking rule. Odd. But you're still only a couple of links away, even if theres not a direct link. :)
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Oh, looking again it's not quite that bad - there are a couple of people with no connections that I've met (although I'm surprised that
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I have met
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Hm, post-pizza activity... :D
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Oh and hello! I don't believe I know you...how did you find this? *curious*
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Re: Small world :)
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Firstly, hello I don't have you on my friends list argh oversight.
Secondly, I just remembered I met you after you left ?honey on my door-handle... :-)
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Yes, I still have a vivid recollection of the honey-smearing incident. :) *nostalgia* Assassins led to some very strange ways of meeting people. I guess that means you count as a direct link from me, as nobody else was particularly involved.
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most of the others link from you or Catt.
BTW any clues as to what I sent Catt, as I really can't remember sending her a pressie. So I'm guessing theres a phantom Ian in her life.
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Oh bother - I must have misremembered who gave her the presents - Someone gave me presents for
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Mono: Mainly in blue and mainly on the right.
Douglas Coupland mailing list: Mainly in yellow and in the middle.
Barbelith: Mainly in pink and in the middle under the yellow group.
Fidonet: Mainly in green and blue to the left of the pink.
Nanowrimo: Mainly in orangey-yellow to the right of the blue.
The more interesting links are the people that fall into more than one group, or are in one of those groups but are not linked to the majority of people in that group. Also, people I know from Southampton are quite spread around the map.
Maybe I should just draw a diagram of the people that are not part of those groups, or put squares around them or something, hmmm.
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Also, I've met
It is all rather
(Anonymous) 2004-08-23 04:27 am (UTC)(link)I reckon you could make a friends mobile with wire, coloured string and lots of labelled corks.
We have lots of corks if you want them.
Penny (feeling a bit like Janet Ellis)
Re: It is all rather
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Secondly, and perhaps more interestingly, the obvious thing which all these people have in common is that they are all LiveJournal users. I am reminded of an article in the Guardian which reported that schoolchildren divided into those who used texts and those who did not with little communication between the two groups. In a way this is unsurprising, because if some one refuses to use my preferred means of communication, then I am unlikely to communicate with them. It is not even an active choice to reject them; it is just easier to communicate with some one else.
Take the case of
What certainly is true is that I wouldn't be communicating with any of them if they weren't on LJ.
Continued...
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I propose that what is going on is something like this: Of the people I meet, I am far more likely to remain in contact with those who are on LJ than those who are not, not necessarily because the latter are objectionable, but just because it is hard work to continue contact. Moreover, the other people I know are also doing the same thing, so that people I know (who are probably users) introduce me to people they know (who are probably also users) and so a really quite small set of people come to make up the entire social universe. There is also quite a lot of pressure on non-users who are part of that social universe to join LJ, or they risk falling out of the loop. Given that the social universe has been shrunk in this way, it is much less surprising that it is so highly connected.
However, there is something slightly more to it than that, because there is a hard to define sense in which the people I know are people like me. So there is, I suppose, an LJ social universe which is not just a miniature version of the whole social universe, but set off slightly to the side. An obvious example would be that it is a culture far more inclined towards BDSM than mainstream culture. (Possibly we are just more open about it, but I doubt it.) Another example would be that many of us have depressive tendencies. In both these cases a remark might seem entirely unremarkable on LJ whereas it would be some how shocking in wider society, hence my occasional feeling when reading the Guardian or talking to my mother that I am dealing with people who live in an entirely different world.
So, I am not quite sure what I am actually saying, but I think it is that there is a large group of people with certain broad personality traits in common, who like other people with similar personality traits, who find LJ a conducive social medium, who tend to exclude non-users (or, at least, turn them into users), and who have a set of mores slightly askew from the mores of wider society.
I may well be trying to put more weight on LJ than it can actually bear, and I am not at all sure how this relates to your post, but I do suspect that something a bit like that is going on.
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