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Loading... Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Ageby Duncan J. Watts
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A fascinating book about all kinds of networks. ( )'Six degrees of separation' is a cliche, both of the language and of everyday experience. But it's also an intriguing idea with a long history and some surprising implications. We all live in tightly bonded social networks, yet linked to vast numbers of people more closely than we sometimes think. Scientists have begun to apply insights from the theoretical study of networks to understand forms as superficially different as social networks and electrical networks, computer networks and economical networks, and to show how common principles underlie them all. Of great value to social computing/ networking. His first book (on Small World Networks) was more technical than this one, which was more of a popular-science account of his work and others in the field. Still, a nice introduction for lay readers. Network science ("small worlds" etc), by one of its main developers.) no reviews | add a review
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"Conversations concerning politics displayed a consistent pattern .... On election day, the strongest predictor of electoral success was not which party an individual privately supported but which party he or she expected would win."Six Degrees attempts to help readers understand the new and exciting field of networks and complexity. While considerably more demanding than a general book like The Tipping Point, it offers readers a snapshot of a riveting moment in science, when understanding things like disease epidemics and the stock market seems almost within our reach. --Therese Littleton
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)
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