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Photograph by Ben Shahn, Natchez, MS, October, 1935. Finding Social Groups: A Meta-Analysis of the Southern Women Data Linton C. Freeman.
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Photograph by Ben Shahn, Natchez, MS, October, 1935 Finding Social Groups: A Meta-Analysis of the Southern Women Data Linton C. Freeman
In 1933 W. Lloyd Warner was teaching at Harvard. He decided to send four graduate students, Allison and Elizabeth Davis and Burleigh and Mary Gardner to study race and social class in Natchez, Mississippi.They collected systematic two mode data on the participation of 18 women in 14 small informal social events.
Davis, Gardner and Gardner sought: 1. To specify tightly knit groups 2. To assign women to core and peripheral positions in their assigned groups They said:
Where it is evident that a group of people participate together in these informal activities consistently, it is obvious that a clique had been isolated. Interviewing can then be used to clarify the relationship. Those individuals who participate together most often and at the most intimate affairs are called core members; those who participate with core members upon some occasions but never as a group by themselves alone are called primary members; while individuals on the fringes, who participate only infrequently, constitute the secondary members of a clique. p. 150
DGG described the groups they came up with: Women 1-9 in one group 9-18 in the other group Woman 9 in both groupsAnd they specified positions in each:1-4 & 13-15 Core 5-7 & 11-12 Primary 8-9 & 9,10, 16, 17, 18 Secondary
DGG described the groups they saw: Women 1-9 in one group 9-18 in the other group Woman 9 in both groupsAnd they specified positions in each:1-4 & 13-15 Core 5-7 & 11-12 Primary 8-9 & 9,10, 16, 17, 18 Secondary
Since then: 21 procedures have been used to assign women to groups, and 11 to assign positions in the groups They are:
DGG 1941 Intuition Homans 1951 Intuition Phillips and Conviser 1972 Information Theory Breiger 1974 Matrix Algebra Breiger, Boorman & Arabie 1975 Computational Bonacich 1978 Boolean Algebra Doreian 1979 Algebraic Topology Bonacich 1991 Correspondence Analysis Freeman 1992 G-Transitivity Everett & Borgatti 1993 Regular Coloring Freeman 1993 Genetic Algorithm I & II Freeman & White 1993 Galois Lattices I & II Borgatti & Everett 1997 Bipartite Analyses I, II & III Skvoretz & Faust 1999 p* Model Roberts 2000 Normalized SVD Osbourn 2000 VERI Procedure Newman 2001 Weighted Proximities
Here I will do a kind of meta-analysis: one data set several analytic procedures. Schmid, Koch, and LaVange (1991): Meta-analysis is “. . . a statistical analysis of the data from some collection of studies in order to synthesize the results.”
The Question of Group Membership Batchelder, Romney and Weller—Consensus Analysis Gets: “true” answers (consensus) “competence of judges” (approach to consensus)
Then calculate matches and covariance. If they agree, factor analyze and the first factor estimates “competence.”
Then calculate matches and covariance. If they agree, factor analyze and the first factor estimates “competence.” Here the correlation between matches and covariance is .967
Two Methods for Ordering: Gower’s (1977) canonical analysis of asymmetry (algebraic-deterministic) Batchelder and Bershad’s (1979) dynamic paired-comparison scaling (probabilistic)
Here, I’ll try to interpret dimensions 2 and 3 of the principal components analysis. Here they are:
They show a consistent pattern in terms of the way they depart from the consensual pattern:
Through time there has been a very slow, but steady movement toward the consensual pattern
And, we can evaluate the several families of approaches to uncovering groups:
Procedure N Average Score Statistical model 1 .957 Eigen structure 3 .954 Optimal partition 5 .941 Transitivity 1 .926 Cliques 1 .916 Algebraic duality 6 .914 Intuition 2 .887