Csaba Pleh Pleh Csaba
Cognitive Science Group Megismerestudomanyi Csoport
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Hungarian Review of Psychology Magyar Pszichologiai Szemle
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2000 19:07:58 +0100
From: Ian Pitchford <ian.pitchford(a)scientist.com>
To: evolutionary-psychology(a)egroups.com
Subject: [evol-psych] Structural cues make 'six degrees' phenomenon work
FOR RELEASE: 23 AUGUST 2000 AT 14:00 ET US
Cornell University News Service
http://www.news.cornell.edu/
Structural cues make 'six degrees' phenomenon work
ITHACA, N.Y. -- We all know it's a small world: Any one of us is only about six
acquaintances away from anyone else. Even in the vast confusion of the World
Wide Web, on the average, one page is only about 16 to 20 clicks away from any
other. But how, without being able to see the whole map, can we get a message
to a person who is only "six degrees of separation" away?
A Cornell University computer scientist has concluded that the answer lies in
personal networking: We use "structural cues" in our local network of friends.
"It's a collective phenomenon. Collectively the network knows how to find
people even if no one person does," says Jon Kleinberg, assistant professor of
computer science, who published his explanation in the latest issue (Aug. 24)
of the journal Nature.
His research is based on a computer model showing that an "ideal" network
structure is one in which connections spread out in an "inverse square"
pattern. In human terms that means that an "ideal" person in the model would
have just about as many friends in the rest of the county as in the
neighborhood, just as many in the rest of the state as in the county, just as
many in the whole nation as in the state, and so on, as you might find in a
highly mobile society.
Kleinberg's answers might have a very practical use in helping to reduce the
number of clicks needed when surfing the web, as well as helping to speed up
other kinds of networks.
Although Kleinberg has been instrumental in the development of improved search
engines for the web, he doesn't see this work as applying to traditional search
engines. They already have the "big picture" of the network, he explains, since
they work from indexes of the web. Rather, he sees it being useful in the
construction of "agents," computer programs that will jump around the web
looking for specific information.
It could also apply to the distribution of data over the Internet, where
computers called routers must send packets of information on their way toward
their destinations without knowing what the state of the network is outside of
their own immediate neighborhood.
Kleinberg has shown that a computer algorithm (the basic design for a program)
can choose the best way to send a message to a faraway place in a network even
if it has knowledge only about the characteristics of its immediate
neighborhood. "The correlation between local structure and long-range
connections provides fundamental cues for finding paths through the network,"
he writes in the Nature paper.
Kleinberg's work is a refinement of an earlier study by two other Cornellians,
Steven H. Strogatz, professor of theoretical and applied mechanics, and his
graduate student, Duncan Watts, now an assistant professor in Columbia
University's sociology department.
Strogatz and Watts offered a mathematical explanation for the results of a
landmark experiment performed in the 1960s at Harvard by social psychologist
Stanley Milgram. The researcher gave letters to randomly chosen residents of
Omaha, Neb., and asked them to deliver the letters to people in Massachusetts
by passing them from one person to another. The average number of steps turned
out to be about six, giving rise to the popular notion of "six degrees of
separation," and eventually the "six degrees of Kevin Bacon" game in which
actors are connected by their movie appearances with other actors.
Strogatz and Watts created a mathematical model of a network in which each
point, or node, is closely connected to many other nodes nearby. When they
added just a few random connections between a few widely separated nodes,
messages could travel from one node to any other much faster than the size of
the network would suggest. The six degrees of separation idea works, they said,
because in every small group of friends there are a few people who have wider
connections, either geographically or across social divisions. They also showed
that such cross-connected networks exist not only between human beings but also
in such diverse places as computer networks, power grids and the human brain.
But Kleinberg has found mathematically that the model proposed by Strogatz and
Watts doesn't explain how messages can travel so quickly through real human
networks. "The Strogatz-Watts model had random connections between nodes.
Completely random connections bring everyone closer together," Kleinberg
explains, "but a computer algorithm would have only local information. The
long-range connections are so random that it [the algorithm] gets lost."
So Kleinberg designed a model in which nodes are arranged in a square grid and
each node is connected randomly to others but with "a bias based on geography."
As a result each node is connected to many nearby, a few at a longer distance
and even fewer at a great distance -- the "inverse square" structure. "This
bias builds in the structural cues in my long-range
connections, and it's the bias that is implicitly guiding you to the target,"
Kleinberg explains. "In the Strogatz-Watts model, there is no bias at all and,
hence, no cues -- the structure of the long-range connections gives you no
information at all about the underlying network structure."
The sender of a message in this system doesn't know where all the connections
are but does know the general geographic direction of the destination, and if
messages are sent in that direction, Kleinberg says, they arrive much faster
than they would by completely random travel.
Kleinberg explains, "The Watts and Strogatz model is sort of like a large group
of people who know each other purely through electronic chat on the Internet.
If you are given the user ID of someone you don't know, it's really hard to
guess which of your friends is liable to help you forward a message to them.
"The inverse square model is more like the geographic view of Milgram's
experiment -- if you live on the West Coast and need to forward a message to
someone in Ithaca, you can guess that a resident of New York state is a good
first step in the chain. They are more likely to know someone in the Finger
Lakes region, who in turn is more likely to know someone in Ithaca and so
forth. Knowing that our distribution of friends is correlated with the
geography lets you form guesses about how to forward the message quickly."
The geographic information on the grid, he adds, is an analogue of the social
connections between people. Just as nodes on his simulated network choose the
correct geographical direction to send a message, so humans may choose a social
direction: A mathematician who wants to send a message to a politician might
start by handing it to a lawyer.
On the other hand, he says, "When long-range connections are generated
uniformly at random, our model describes a world in which short chains exist
but individuals, faced with a disorienting array of social contacts, are unable
to find them."
The paper in Nature is titled "Navigation in a Small World."
Related World Wide Web sites: The following sites provide additional
information on this news release. Some might not be part of the Cornell
University community, and Cornell has no control over their content or
availability.
-- Jon Kleinberg's home page:
http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/kleinber
-- Nature:
http://www.nature.com
http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/cuns-scm082200.html
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