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Six Degrees of Separation. Teachers Teaching With Technology 2010 Annual Meeting - Atlanta, GA Ray Barton, Olympus High, SLC, UT. Connected: The Power of Six Degrees. Examples of networks. The Oracle of Kevin Bacon. The Human Disease Network.
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Six Degrees of Separation Teachers Teaching With Technology 2010 Annual Meeting - Atlanta, GA Ray Barton, Olympus High, SLC, UT
The Human Disease Network • Diseases seem to share most of their genes with other diseases. • Type 2 diabetes and prostate cancer both appear to be influenced by variation in the JAZF1 gene
The Internet • Map of the shortest route from a test website to about 100,000 others • Like colors indicate similar web addresses
Social Networks The Entire World • If you had 100 friends and each friend had 100 friends and so on... what could be the maximum degree of separation between you and anyone in the world? • What assumptions did you make in your calculations?
How many friends would each person need under these assumptions in order to have a maximum of six degrees of separation?
Mapping real-world networksWatts & Strogatz • The Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon
Two Network Models • Watts & Strogatz (Small World) • Very small average shortest path length • Large clustering coefficient (cliques) • Erdos-Renyi (Random) • Small average shortest path length – log(n) • Small clustering coefficient
Mapping Real-world networksBarabasi • Mapping the Internet
Which graph should represent the distribution of nodes if networks are random?
Power Law • Hubs • 80-20 rule • Scale Free • f(cx)=kf(x)
A node with twice as many links is • one fourth as frequent • half as frequent • twice as frequent • four times as frequent
Why hubs? • The random network model assumes all nodes exist at the beginning of the network formation. This is not the case. • In scale free networks, older nodes have greater opportunity to acquire links • Preferential attachment – the rich get richer
Network Robustness • Resistant to attacks on randomly selected nodes. • 80% random node failure but network still functions • Vulnerable to coordinated attacks on hubs • 5-15% hub failure can crash the network. • Scale-Free networks have a threshold of zero
References • Connected: The Power of Six Degrees http://gephi.org/2008/how-kevin-bacon-cured-cancer/ • The Oracle of Kevin Bacon http://oracleofbacon.org/ • Scale-Free Networks by Albert-Laszlo Barabasi and Eric Bonabeau http://www.barabasilab.com/pubs/CCNR-ALB_Publications/200305-01_SciAmer-ScaleFree/200305-01_SciAmer-ScaleFree.pdf • Watts, D.J. (1999). Small Worlds: The Dynamics of Networks Between Order and Randomness. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00541-9 • Watts, D.J. (2004). Six Degrees: the science of a connected age. W.W. Norton & Company.ISBN 0-393-32542-3