Human Communication Dynamics in Digital Footsteps: A Study of the Agreement between Self-Reported Ties and Email Networks


Authors / Editors


Research Areas

No matching items found.


Publication Details

Output typeJournal article

Author listWuchty S, Uzzi B

PublisherPublic Library of Science

Publication year2011

JournalPLoS ONE (1932-6203)

Journal acronymPLOS ONE

Volume number6

Issue number11

ISSN1932-6203

eISSN1932-6203

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


Unpaywall Data

Open access statusgold

Full text URLhttps://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0026972&type=printable


Abstract

Digital communication data has created opportunities to advance the knowledge of human dynamics in many areas, including national security, behavioral health, and consumerism. While digital data uniquely captures the totality of a person's communication, past research consistently shows that a subset of contacts makes up a person's "social network" of unique resource providers. To address this gap, we analyzed the correspondence between self-reported social network data and email communication data with the objective of identifying the dynamics in e-communication that correlate with a person's perception of a significant network tie. First, we examined the predictive utility of three popular methods to derive social network data from email data based on volume and reciprocity of bilateral email exchanges. Second, we observed differences in the response dynamics along self-reported ties, allowing us to introduce and test a new method that incorporates time-resolved exchange data. Using a range of robustness checks for measurement and misreporting errors in self-report and email data, we find that the methods have similar predictive utility. Although e-communication has lowered communication costs with large numbers of persons, and potentially extended our number of, and reach to contacts, our case results suggest that underlying behavioral patterns indicative of friendship or professional contacts continue to operate in a classical fashion in email interactions.


Keywords

No matching items found.


Documents

No matching items found.


Last updated on 2025-17-07 at 03:02