Abstract :
Social-network analysis generally helps researchers understand how groups of people interact. In this article the author uses small-scale egocentric social networks, based on volitional, explicit connections, to understand how people manage their personal and group communications. Two research projects using this approach show that such networks can give researchers important insight into the people who communicate online. Soylent, a project based on email, shows several common patterns in social interaction. The Roles project, based on Usenet newsgroups, suggests that various online social spaces can behave very differently from each other.
Keywords :
Internet; groupware; human computer interaction; information resources; interactive systems; user interfaces; Roles project; Soylent project; Usenet newsgroup; egocentric social network; email; group communication; online communication; social interaction; Bridges; Diseases; Graph theory; Information analysis; Pattern analysis; Social network services; Sociology; egocentric networks; online communication; social computing; social networking;