I’m teaching a lecture course on Political Sociology at the moment, and because everyone is so excited about social capital and social network analysis these days, I decided to run a little online experiment with and on my students. The audience is large (at the beginning of this term, about 220 students had registered for this lecture series) and quite diverse, with some students still in their first year, others in their second, third or fourth and even a bunch of veterans who have spent most of their adult lives in university education.

Who knows whom in a large group of learners?
Continue reading “Which of my students are most likely to gang up against me?” »
Tags: limesurvey, networkx, pajek, political sociology, python, sna, social capital, social network analysis, social networks, stata, survey data
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|
I’m teaching an introductory SNA class this year. Following a time-honoured tradition, I conducted a small network survey at the beginning of the class using Limesurvey. Getting the data from Limesurvey to Stata via CSV was easy enough. Here is the data set. But how does one get the data from Stata to Pajek for analysis? Actually, it’s quite easy.
First, we need to change the layout of the data. In the data set, there is one record for each of the 13 respondent. Each record has 13 variables, one for each (potential) arc connecting the respondent to other students in the class. This is equivalent to Stata’s “wide” form. Stata’s reshape command will happily re-arrange the data to the “long” form, with one record for each arc. This is what Pajek requires.
Continue reading “How to get from Stata to Pajek” »
Tags: ascii, listtex, pajek, reshape, sna, stata
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|

Worldwide mutual citations in Political Science
Last Saturday, we presented our ongoing work on collaboration and citation networks in Political Science at the
4th UK Network conference held at the University of Greenwich. For this conference, we created a presentation on Knowledge Networks in European Political Science that summarises most of our findings on political science in Britain and Germany and provides some additional international context. The picture on the right shows a subnetwork of about 320 scientists who mutually cite each others’ work. Watch out for the dense IR/methods cluster and the lack of (mutual) connections between the dispersed political sociology and formal methods camps.
Continue reading “Presentation: Knowledge Networks in European Political Science” »
Tags: analysis, bibliometrics, citation, networks, pajek, pdf, Political Science, presentation, sna
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|