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Compară metode

Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.

Positional Analysis×Blockmodeling×Homophily Analysis×
DomeniuSociologySociologySociology
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Anul apariției197619761954 (concept); 2001 (synthesis)
Autorul originalHarrison White, Ronald Burt, and colleaguesHarrison White, Scott Boorman & Ronald BreigerLazarsfeld & Merton (concept); McPherson, Smith-Lovin & Cook (synthesis)
TipFramework for identifying network positions and the roles among themNetwork partitioning into positions and a reduced role structureMeasurement of similarity-based tie formation
Sursa seminalăBurt, R. S. (1976). Positions in networks. Social Forces, 55(1), 93–122. DOI ↗White, H. C., Boorman, S. A., & Breiger, R. L. (1976). Social structure from multiple networks. I. Blockmodels of roles and positions. American Journal of Sociology, 81(4), 730–780. DOI ↗McPherson, M., Smith-Lovin, L., & Cook, J. M. (2001). Birds of a feather: homophily in social networks. Annual Review of Sociology, 27, 415–444. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativerole analysis, positional role analysis, network role and position analysis, regular equivalence analysisblock modeling, blockmodel analysis, generalized blockmodeling, CONCORhomophily measurement, assortative mixing analysis, birds-of-a-feather analysis, tie-similarity analysis
Înrudite544
RezumatPositional analysis is the network-analytic program that identifies the positions actors occupy — sets of actors equivalent in their relational patterns — and characterizes the system of roles that links those positions. Growing out of Harrison White's structuralism and Ronald Burt's operationalization in the 1970s, it treats the social structure as a small set of positions and the role relations among them, rather than as a collection of individual actors.Blockmodeling is a family of methods that simplify a social network by partitioning its actors into positions — groups of actors who are equivalent in their pattern of ties — and summarizing the relations between positions as a compact image, or reduced role structure. Introduced by Harrison White, Scott Boorman, and Ronald Breiger in 1976, it shifts attention from individuals to the structural roles they occupy.Homophily analysis quantifies the tendency of similar individuals to form ties — the principle that 'birds of a feather flock together'. It compares the rate at which people connect with others who share an attribute (race, gender, age, education, attitudes) against what would be expected by chance, distinguishing the homophily that arises merely from group sizes from the genuine, behavior-driven preference for similar others.
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  1. v1
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  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Surse
  3. PUBLISHED

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ScholarGateCompară metode: Positional Analysis · Blockmodeling · Homophily Analysis. Preluat la 2026-06-25 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare