Communication and Social Networks (Fall 2023)/Travers summary: Difference between revisions

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Overall, the paper makes both a methodological contribution in demonstrating the viability of tracing acquaintance chains, and provides empirical evidence for the small world hypothesis that society is highly interconnected.
Overall, the paper makes both a methodological contribution in demonstrating the viability of tracing acquaintance chains, and provides empirical evidence for the small world hypothesis that society is highly interconnected.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Study Question !! Answer
|-
| What was the main research question? || How interconnected is society?
|-
| What was the basic method? || Tracing acquaintance chains.
|- 
| Where did the starter groups come from? || Nebraska and Boston.
|-
| How many chains reached the target? || 64 out of 296.
|-
| What was the mean chain length? || 5.2 intermediaries.
|-
| What did chain length depend on? || Geographic proximity of starters. 
|- 
| What was observed about intermediaries? || Funneling through common people.
|-
| What participant tendencies were found? || Choosing similar recipients. 
|-
| What are the main contributions? || Methodological and empirical.
|-
}

Latest revision as of 02:28, 4 October 2023

The paper reports on an experimental study by Jeffrey Travers and Stanley Milgram investigating the "small world problem" - the idea that society is highly interconnected with short paths linking any two people. The study tested this by tracing acquaintance chains from arbitrarily selected "starting persons" to a designated "target person" in Boston. The starters were from Nebraska and Boston. Each starter received a document to mail to the target. They could only send it to a first-name acquaintance who might advance it closer to the target.

64 of the 296 chains reached the target, demonstrating the feasibility of the method. The mean chain length was 5.2 intermediaries, indicating a high level of social interconnectedness. Chains from the Boston starters were significantly shorter than Nebraska ones, showing the effect of geographic proximity.

Funneling of chains through common intermediaries was observed - 3 people accounted for 48% of completions. Participants also showed strong tendencies to select demographically similar recipients based on age, sex and occupation.

The results provide insight into the structure of acquaintance networks and interconnectedness in a large population. The method appears useful for empirically studying social networks. Extensions could involve varying starter and target characteristics.

Overall, the paper makes both a methodological contribution in demonstrating the viability of tracing acquaintance chains, and provides empirical evidence for the small world hypothesis that society is highly interconnected.