Share on Facebook

A bridge is a type of social tie that connects two different groups in a social network.

The Yam Chah Photo Opportunity! IMG_1013 IMG_1011 IMG_1012 February 2013 ...item 1f.. The Western Sky ... New York Please - No Loitering Making Love to a Smoothie IMG_1017 IMG_1016 Keep New York City Clean IMG_1023 IMG_1019 IMG_1018 IMG_1020 IMG_1024 French Kissing the Smoothie
Images Source: Flickr. Images licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

A bridge is a type of social tie that connects two different groups in a social network.

Contents

General bridge [edit]

In general, a bridge is a direct tie between nodes that would otherwise be in disconnected components of the graph.[1]

This means that say that A and B make up a social networking graph, n_1 is in A, n_2 is in B, and there is a social tie e between n_1 and n_2. If e were to be removed, A and B would become disconnected components of the graph. This means that e is a bridge.

InterpersonalBridge.jpg

For example, A could represent a corporation and B Congress. n_1 could then be a lobbyist and n_2 a Congressman. e would then represent the relationship between that corporation and Congress that only exists through the lobbyist.

This is very similar to the concept of a bridge in graph theory, but with special social networking properties such as strong and weak ties.

Local bridge [edit]

Local bridges are ties between two nodes in a social graph that are the shortest (and often the only plausible) route by which information might travel from those connected to one to those connected to the other. [2] Local bridges differ from regular bridges in that the end points of the local bridge cannot have a tie directly between them and should not share any common neighbors.

InterpersonalLocalBridge.jpg

Social networking implications [edit]

In social networks, bridges are used to transmit information from one group to another. The breadth of information spread depends heavily on the number and connectedness of the bridges available to the originators of the information. Author Malcolm Gladwell characterizes people that habitually act as bridges as Connectors in his book The Tipping Point.

Bridges and local bridges are powerful ways to convey awareness of new things, but they are weak at transmitting behaviors that are in some way risky or costly to adopt. Weak ties are able to spread awareness of a joke or an on-line video with remarkable speed, but political mobilization moves more sluggishly, needing to gain momentum within neighborhoods and small communities. McAdams observed that strong ties, rather than weak ties, played a much more dominant role in recruitment to Freedom Summer on college campuses in the 1960s. [3]

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Ahn, Luis von. "Thresholds and Collective Action." Sept. 16, 2008. http://scienceoftheweb.org/15-396/lectures/lecture07.pdf
  2. ^ Granovetter, Mark. "THE STRENGTH OF WEAK TIES: A NETWORK THEORY REVISITED." Sociological Theory, Volume 1 (1983), 201-233. http://www.si.umich.edu/~rfrost/courses/SI110/readings/In_Out_and_Beyond/Granovetter.pdf
  3. ^ Ahn, Luis von. "Thresholds and Collective Action." Sept. 16, 2008. Slides 9-10. http://scienceoftheweb.org/15-396/lectures/lecture07.pdf
Wikipedia content is licensed under the GNU Free Document License or Creative Commons CC-BY-SA
Loading...
Loading...