Comments on: They Rule http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1728 This is a supplemental blog for a course which will cover how the social, technological, and natural worlds are connected, and how the study of networks sheds light on these connections. Fri, 08 Mar 2013 14:25:55 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.3.3 By: Cornell Info 204 - Networks » Blog Archive » Model of Networks as Random Graphs http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1728#comment-1144 Cornell Info 204 - Networks » Blog Archive » Model of Networks as Random Graphs Sun, 18 Feb 2007 05:06:40 +0000 http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1728#comment-1144 [...] As an additional note, the paper also references the idea of “interlocks” among corporate board members (Section IV.B.4, p. 25), which was the topic of penguin21’s post They Rule, which Professor Kleinberg linked to the paper What do Interlocks do? in the parallel digest blog for this course. [...] […] As an additional note, the paper also references the idea of “interlocks” among corporate board members (Section IV.B.4, p. 25), which was the topic of penguin21’s post They Rule, which Professor Kleinberg linked to the paper What do Interlocks do? in the parallel digest blog for this course. […]

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By: Cornell Info 204 Digest » Blog Archive » Welcome to the Network Digest Blog http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1728#comment-1143 Cornell Info 204 Digest » Blog Archive » Welcome to the Network Digest Blog Mon, 12 Feb 2007 06:35:06 +0000 http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1728#comment-1143 [...] A number of posts focus on the role of social networks in different settings. penguins21 writes about They Rule, which maps the overlapping memberships of corporate boards of directors. This is a glimpse into an active area of sociological research on “corporate interlocks'’ — the study these overlapping board memberships and what they imply about influence and information flow in business and government. For a survey of this style of research, see for example Mark Mizruchi’s paper, What Do Interlocks Do? [...] […] A number of posts focus on the role of social networks in different settings. penguins21 writes about They Rule, which maps the overlapping memberships of corporate boards of directors. This is a glimpse into an active area of sociological research on “corporate interlocks’’ — the study these overlapping board memberships and what they imply about influence and information flow in business and government. For a survey of this style of research, see for example Mark Mizruchi’s paper, What Do Interlocks Do? […]

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