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Social Networks, Volume 60
Volume 60, January 2020
- Nicholas M. Harrigan, Giuseppe (Joe) Labianca, Filip Agneessens:
Negative ties and signed graphs research: Stimulating research on dissociative forces in social networks. 1-10 - Jürgen Lerner, Alessandro Lomi:
The free encyclopedia that anyone can dispute: An analysis of the micro-structural dynamics of positive and negative relations in the production of contentious Wikipedia articles. 11-25 - Daniel S. Halgin, Stephen P. Borgatti, Zhi Huang:
Prismatic effects of negative ties. 26-33 - Mark Wittek, Clemens Kroneberg, Kathrin Lämmermann:
Who is fighting with whom? How ethnic origin shapes friendship, dislike, and physical violence relations in German secondary schools. 34-47 - Dorottya Kisfalusi, Judit Pál, Zsófia Boda:
Bullying and victimization among majority and minority students: The role of peers' ethnic perceptions. 48-60 - Travis G. Tatum, Thomas U. Grund:
Accusation and confession discrepancies in bullying: Dual-perspective networks and individual-level attributes. 61-70 - Rozemarijn van der Ploeg, Christian Steglich, René Veenstra:
The way bullying works: How new ties facilitate the mutual reinforcement of status and bullying in elementary schools. 71-82 - Nejat Arinik, Rosa Figueiredo, Vincent Labatut:
Multiple partitioning of multiplex signed networks: Application to European parliament votes. 83-102 - Zachary P. Neal:
A sign of the times? Weak and strong polarization in the U.S. Congress, 1973-2016. 103-112 - Jialin Hua, Jian Yu, Miin-Shen Yang:
Fast clustering for signed graphs based on random walk gap. 113-128 - Christoph Stadtfeld, Károly Takács, András Vörös:
The Emergence and Stability of Groups in Social Networks. 129-145
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