An Observational Study to Identify the Role of Online Communication in Offline Social Networks

Social networks are frequently categorized as online (supported electronically without necessitating participants meeting) or offline (defined though physical interactions). Often these social networks are treated as mutually exclusive but in many situations they coexist across the same community. I...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAdvanced Machine Learning Technologies and Applications pp. 509 - 522
Main Authors Ali, Mona A. S., Hassanien, Aboul Ella
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Cham Springer International Publishing 2014
SeriesCommunications in Computer and Information Science
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ISBN3319134604
9783319134604
ISSN1865-0929
1865-0937
DOI10.1007/978-3-319-13461-1_47

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Summary:Social networks are frequently categorized as online (supported electronically without necessitating participants meeting) or offline (defined though physical interactions). Often these social networks are treated as mutually exclusive but in many situations they coexist across the same community. In these circumstances online social networks provide communication to enhance information flow and support different types of relationship. In this paper we undertake an observational study of a social network of 98 undergraduate students to determine the role of on-line communication in offline social networks. We exploit social network analysis to examine the structure of the underlying communication. We examine the role of electronic social networks (web-based, email, telephone and SMS) to establish how different methods of communication and communication frequency support different types of relationship. Interesting trends emerge on how different technologies are used. The results reaffirm the importance of on-line social networks in facilitating structurally important weak links and reinforcing strong links.
ISBN:3319134604
9783319134604
ISSN:1865-0929
1865-0937
DOI:10.1007/978-3-319-13461-1_47