Measuring social mobility in temporal networks

被引:0
|
作者
Matthew Russell Barnes [1 ]
Vincenzo Nicosia [2 ]
Richard G. Clegg [1 ]
机构
[1] Queen Mary University of London,School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science
[2] Queen Mary University of London,School of Mathematical Sciences
关键词
Time evolving networks; Mobility; Hierarchy; Ranking;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-025-89090-1
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In complex networks, the “rich-get-richer” effect (nodes with high degree at one point in time gain more degree in their future) is commonly observed. In practice this is often studied on a static network snapshot, for example, a preferential attachment model assumed to explain the more highly connected nodes or a rich-club effect that analyses the most highly connected nodes. In this paper, we consider temporal measures of how success (measured here as node degree) propagates across time. By analogy with social mobility (a measure of people moving within a social hierarchy through their life) we define hierarchical mobility to measure how a node’s propensity to gain degree changes over time. We introduce an associated taxonomy of temporal correlation statistics including mobility, philanthropy and community. Mobility measures the extent to which a node’s degree gain in one time period predicts its degree gain in the next. Philanthropy and community measure similar properties related to node neighbourhood. We apply these statistics both to artificial models and to 26 real temporal networks. We find that most of our networks show a tendency for individual nodes and their neighbourhoods to remain in similar hierarchical positions over time, while most networks show low correlative effects between individuals and their neighbourhoods. Moreover, we show that the mobility taxonomy can discriminate between networks from different fields. We also generate artificial network models to gain intuition about the behaviour and expected range of the statistics. The artificial models show that the opposite of the “rich-get-richer” effect requires the existence of inequality of degree in a network. Overall, we show that measuring the hierarchical mobility of a temporal network is an invaluable resource for discovering its underlying structural dynamics.
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