
Mined Individuals in Large Networks
Christophe Prieur(Author)
ISTE Press - Elsevier
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-1-78548-019-5 (ISBN)
Description
Mined Individuals in Large Networks presents an overview of one century of research analyzing the growth of networks in our individualist societies, including methods from computer science to address questions within social sciences. The book shows how, with huge data sets, it is possible to gather vast amounts of information on individuals from large scale and social networks.
At stake is the ability for the citizens to keep a grip on the social changes evolving around networking. The public concern about massive online surveillance shows the need for tools and methods that would not be only in the hands of some powerful happy few. Now that social network analysis is done by more computer scientists than social scientists, it is essential to remember the social implications of algorithms when they are applied to human beings.
At stake is the ability for the citizens to keep a grip on the social changes evolving around networking. The public concern about massive online surveillance shows the need for tools and methods that would not be only in the hands of some powerful happy few. Now that social network analysis is done by more computer scientists than social scientists, it is essential to remember the social implications of algorithms when they are applied to human beings.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78548-019-5 (9781785480195)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Christophe Prieur is Associate Professor within the Demographics Lab and Social History, Telecom ParisTech. He served as Associate Professor of Universite Paris Diderot for 13 years. He received his PhD in Computer Science from Universite Paris Diderot. His current research encompasses uses of social media, identity, individuals in large networks, social networks analysis, mining network data, complex networks and graph algorithms.
Content
Part I: One century of networks Ch1: Networks, a self-fulfilling prophecy? Ch2: Sorcerer's apprentices
Part II: Mining individuals in networks Ch3: Small networks among large ones Ch4: From local to global, and back
Part III: Changes Ch5: The network as a social tool Ch6: Identity and privacy
Part II: Mining individuals in networks Ch3: Small networks among large ones Ch4: From local to global, and back
Part III: Changes Ch5: The network as a social tool Ch6: Identity and privacy