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Article
On the Discovery of Social Roles in Large Scale Social Systems
Social Network Analysis And Mining
  • Derek Doran, Wright State University - Main Campus
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2015
Disciplines
Abstract

The social role of a participant in a social system is a label conceptualizing the circumstances under which she interacts within it. They may be used as a theoretical tool that explains why and how users participate in an online social system. Social role analysis also serves practical purposes, such as reducing the structure of complex systems to relationships among roles rather than alters, and enabling a comparison of social systems that emerge in similar contexts. This article presents a data-driven approach for the discovery of social roles in large scale social systems. Motivated by an analysis of the present art, the method discovers roles by the conditional triad censuses of user ego-networks, which is a promising tool because they capture the degree to which basic social forces push upon a user to interact with others. Clusters of censuses, inferred from samples of large scale network carefully chosen to preserve local structural properties, define the social roles. The promise of the method is demonstrated by discussing and discovering the roles that emerge in both Facebook and Wikipedia. The article concludes with a discussion of the challenges and future opportunities in the discovery of social roles in large social systems.

Citation Information
Derek Doran. "On the Discovery of Social Roles in Large Scale Social Systems" Social Network Analysis And Mining Vol. 5 (2015) ISSN: 18695450
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/derek_doran/42/