1. Testing structural balance theories in heterogeneous signed networks.
- Author
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Gallo, Anna, Garlaschelli, Diego, Lambiotte, Renaud, Saracco, Fabio, and Squartini, Tiziano
- Subjects
- *
EQUILIBRIUM testing , *ODD numbers , *RANDOM graphs , *HUMAN behavior , *BIOLOGICAL networks , *TRIANGLES - Abstract
The abundance of data about social relationships allows the human behavior to be analyzed as any other natural phenomenon. Here we focus on balance theory, stating that social actors tend to avoid establishing cycles with an odd number of negative links. This statement, however, can be supported only after a comparison with a benchmark. Since the existing ones disregard actors' heterogeneity, we extend Exponential Random Graphs to signed networks with both global and local constraints and employ them to assess the significance of empirical unbalanced patterns. We find that the nature of balance crucially depends on the null model: while homogeneous benchmarks favor the weak balance theory, according to which only triangles with one negative link should be under-represented, heterogeneous benchmarks favor the strong balance theory, according to which also triangles with all negative links should be under-represented. Biological networks, instead, display strong frustration under any benchmark, confirming that structural balance inherently characterizes social networks. According to balance theory, social actors avoid establishing cycles with an odd number of negative links. This statement can be supported only after a comparison with a benchmark. The authors find that the level of balance depends on the null-model employed: homogeneous ones favor the weak balance theory; heterogeneous ones favor the strong balance theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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