Difference between revisions of "Network Pattern"
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[http://www.google.com/search?q=network+nature+linked+connected+Graph+AI ...Google search] | [http://www.google.com/search?q=network+nature+linked+connected+Graph+AI ...Google search] | ||
| − | * [http://networksciencebook.com/ Network Science | Albert-László Barabási]... free online book to get started | + | * [http://networksciencebook.com/ Network Science |] [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Albert-László Barabási]]... free online book to get started |
* [[Graph]] | * [[Graph]] | ||
* [[Computer Networks]] | * [[Computer Networks]] | ||
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<youtube>rduH9mKvnjM</youtube> | <youtube>rduH9mKvnjM</youtube> | ||
| − | <b>Authors in Conversation: Niall Ferguson and Albert- | + | <b>Authors in Conversation: Niall Ferguson and [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Albert-László Barabási]] |
| − | </b><br>Harvard Club of Boston's Author Series hosted a special evening conversation with renowned historian Niall Ferguson and the nation's foremost network science expert Albert- | + | </b><br>Harvard Club of Boston's Author Series hosted a special evening conversation with renowned historian Niall Ferguson and the nation's foremost network science expert [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Albert-László Barabási]]. In his most recent book, The Square and the Tower, Ferguson applies lessons from [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Barabási's]] pioneering work in network science to the domain of historical analysis, drawing insights from a wide range of fascinating examples across past decades and centuries, with important implications for current affairs. As [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Barabási]] has demonstrated both in his academic work and in his popular writing (Linked), network science research has led to meaningful discoveries in areas ranging from biology and medicine, to institutional analysis and social networks. |
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<youtube>7YFNf1ix_yY</youtube> | <youtube>7YFNf1ix_yY</youtube> | ||
| − | <b>BURSTS: The Hidden Pattern Behind Everything We Do | Albert László Barabási | Talks at Google | + | <b>BURSTS: The Hidden Pattern Behind Everything We Do | [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Albert-László Barabási]] | Talks at Google |
| − | </b><br>The Authors@Google program welcomed Albert László Barabási to Google's New York office to discuss his book, "BURSTS: The Hidden Pattern Behind Everything We Do" "In BURSTS (April 2010), | + | </b><br>The Authors@Google program welcomed Albert László Barabási to Google's New York office to discuss his book, "BURSTS: The Hidden Pattern Behind Everything We Do" "In BURSTS (April 2010), [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Barabási]], Director of the Center for Network Science at Northeastern University, shatters one of the most fundamental assumptions in modern science and technology regarding human behavior. [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Barabási]] argues that, rather than being random, humans actually act in predictable patterns. We go along for long periods of quiet routine followed suddenly by loud bursts of activity. Barabasi demonstrates that these breaks in routine, or "bursts," are present in all aspects of our existence— in the way we write emails, spend our money, manage our health, form ideas. [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Barabási]] has even found "burstiness" in our webpage clicking activity and the online news cycle." |
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<b>The Science of Six Degrees of Separation | <b>The Science of Six Degrees of Separation | ||
</b><br>Are all people on Earth really connected through just six steps? | </b><br>Are all people on Earth really connected through just six steps? | ||
| − | There's much more science in this than I initially expected. It turns out ordered networks with a small degree of randomness become small-work networks. This is why your acquaintances turn out to be more important in job searches and finding new opportunities than close friends. Animations in this video by The Lyosacks: http://www.youtube.com/user/TheLyosacks There are some great books on this topic: Duncan Watts, Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age Albert- | + | There's much more science in this than I initially expected. It turns out ordered networks with a small degree of randomness become small-work networks. This is why your acquaintances turn out to be more important in job searches and finding new opportunities than close friends. Animations in this video by The Lyosacks: http://www.youtube.com/user/TheLyosacks There are some great books on this topic: Duncan Watts, Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age [[Creatives#Albert-László Barabási|Albert-László Barabási]], Linked: How Everything is Connected to Everything Else And here are articles I referred to: [http://www.uvm.edu/pdodds/files/papers/others/1969/travers1969.pdf Milgram's small world experiment] and [http://sociology.stanford.edu/sites/g/files/sbiybj9501/f/publications/the_strength_of_weak_ties_and_exch_w-gans.pdf Strength of Weak Ties | Mark S. Granovetter] |
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Revision as of 08:29, 22 October 2020
Youtube search... ...Google search
- Network Science | Albert-László Barabási... free online book to get started
- Graph
- Computer Networks
- NetworkX a Python library for studying graphs and networks.
- Emergence
- COVID-19
- Network Science.org ...power-law (scale-free) node-degree distributions are a property of only sparsely connected networks. More densely connected networks show an increasing divergence from power-law
- An Experimental Study of the Small World Problem | Jeffrey Travers and Stanley Milgram
- The Square and the Tower | Niall Ferguson
- The Oracle of Bacon computes the Bacon number of any actor or actress from Wikipedia data. A previous implementation used IMDB data. ...Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon | Wikipedia
Network science is an academic field which studies complex networks such as telecommunication networks, computer networks, biological networks, cognitive and semantic networks, and social networks, considering distinct elements or actors represented by nodes (or vertices) and the connections between the elements or actors as links (or edges). The field draws on theories and methods including graph theory from mathematics, statistical mechanics from physics, data mining and information visualization from computer science, inferential modeling from statistics, and social structure from sociology. The United States National Research Council defines network science as "the study of network representations of physical, biological, and social phenomena leading to predictive models of these phenomena." Network science | Wikipedia
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Albert-László Barabási
- Wikipedia
- Albert-László Barabási Website
- Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means for Business, Science, and Everyday Life | Albert-László Barabási ... Amazon
- Network Science | Albert-László Barabási ...Amazon
- Bursts: The Hidden Patterns Behind Everything We Do, from Your E-mail to Bloody Crusades | Albert-László Barabási ...Amazon
- The Formula: The Universal Laws of Success | Albert-László Barabási ... Amazon
Albert-László Barabási is a Hungarian/Romanian network scientist and author. He is also the Robert Gray Dodge Professor of Network Science and a Distinguished University Professor at Northeastern University, where he directs the Center for Complex Network Research, and holds appointments in the Departments of Physics and College of Computer and Information Science, as well as in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women Hospital in the Channing Division of Network Science, and is a member of the Center for Cancer Systems Biology at Dana Farber Cancer Institute.