Does Homophily Predict Consensus Times? Testing a Model of Network Structure via a Dynamic Process
Benjamin Golub and
Matthew Jackson
Review of Network Economics, 2012, vol. 11, issue 3, 31
Abstract:
We test theoretical results from Golub and Jackson (2012a), which are based on a random network model, regarding time to convergence of a learning/behavior-updating process. In particular, we see how well those theoretical results match the process when it is simulated on empirically observed high school friendship networks. This tests whether a parsimonious random network model mimics real-world networks with regard to predicting properties of a class of behavioral processes. It also tests whether our theoretical predictions for asymptotically large societies are accurate when applied to populations ranging from thirty to three thousand individuals. We find that the theoretical results account for more than half of the variation in convergence times on the real networks. We conclude that a simple multi-type random network model with types defined by simple observable attributes (age, sex, race) captures aspects of real networks that are relevant for a class of iterated updating processes.
Keywords: homophily; friendships; social networks; random graphs; inhomogeneous random graphs; spectral graph theory (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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DOI: 10.1515/1446-9022.1367
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