EuroVis 2011

May 31st, 2011 - June 3rd, 2011

Categories: Applications, Human Factors, Software, Visualization

EuroVis 2011 Logo
EuroVis 2011 Logo

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EVL PhD candidate Khairi Reda presents “Visualizing the Evolution of Community Structures in Dynamic Social Networks”, Khairi Reda, Chayant Tantipathananandh, Andrew Johnson, Jason Leigh, Tanya Berger-Wolf, Graphs & Networks session, EuroVis 2011, Thursday, June 2nd.

EuroVis 2011 is the 13th annual Visualization Symposium jointly organized by the Eurographics Working Group on Data Visualization and the IEEE Visualization and Graphics Technical Committee.

Abstract
Social network analysis is the study of patterns of interaction between social entities. The field is attracting increasing attention from diverse disciplines including sociology, epidemiology, and behavioral ecology. An important sociological phenomenon that draws the attention of analysts is the emergence of communities, which tend to form, evolve, and dissolve gradually over a period of time. Understanding this evolution is crucial to sociologists and domain scientists, and often leads to a better appreciation of the social system under study. Therefore, it is imperative that social network visualization tools support this task. While graph-based representations are well suited for investigating structural properties of networks at a single point in time, they appear to be significantly less useful when used to analyze gradual structural changes over a period of time. In this paper, we present an interactive visualization methodology for dynamic social networks. Our technique focuses on revealing the community structure implied by the evolving interaction patterns between individuals. We apply our visualization to analyze the community structure in the US House of Representatives. We also report on a user study conducted with the participation of behavioral ecologists working with social network datasets that depict interactions between wild animals. Findings from the user study confirm that the visualization was helpful in providing answers to sociological questions as well as eliciting new observations on the social organization of the population under study.

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