Classroom Companion: Business
Positive and Negative Network Effects
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Introduction to Digital Economics
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- Box 9.1 Six Degrees of Separation
9.2
Positive and Negative Network Effects Network effects may be visualized using undirected networks illustrated in . Fig. 9.1 . Network A has 3 nodes and 3 links, network B has 7 nodes and 11 links, and network C has 11 nodes and 21 links. The nodes may be individual con- sumers or users of a specific digital service, and the links may represent the interac- tion between the users, e.g., trading, communication, or any other common interest. Not every pair of node needs to be connected in these networks. Networks may be Chapter 9 · Network Effects 125 9 small—as those depicted in . Fig. 9.1 —or large such as Facebook, with more than two billion nodes (users). The number of links is a measure of the value of a network and is the essential mechanism creating network effects. Another impor- tant concept of networks is the distance between two arbitrary nodes; that is, the smallest number of links that must be traversed when travelling from one node to the other. This distance is important when evaluating how fast innovations diffuse in networks. The concept is discussed in 7 Box 9.1 . Box 9.1 Six Degrees of Separation Six degrees of separation is the concept that any human being is (at the most) six intermediaries away from any other human on Earth. That is, anyone can connect to any other person through a chain of friends with a maximum of six hops. This is illustrated in . Fig. 9.2 . While by some considered to be an urban myth, research has shown that the six degrees of separation concept is valid in many social networks. The theories of a “shrinking world” were first popularized by the Hungarian author Frigyes Karinthy in 1929. Karinthy argued that the modern world at that time was shrinking, primarily because of recent innovations in com- munications such as the telegraph, radio, and telephone. In his paper “The Small World Problem” published in the journal Psychology Today in 1967, Stanley Milgram showed experimen- tally that this was indeed true. He found that the average social distance between two randomly chosen individuals in the USA was 5.2 (Milgram, 1967 ). His observations later became known as the “six degrees of separation” concept. Stanley Milgram did not use this term himself; the popularization of the term is attributed to John Guare and his play “Six Degrees of Separation” from 1990. Other concepts related to the “six degrees of separation” are the Erdös number describing the collaboration dis- tance to the mathematician Paul Erdös based on shared publications (The Erdös Number Project. Oakland University., n.d. ) and the Bacon number describing the distance to the American actor Kevin Bacon based on shared movie appearances. The collaboration dis- tances are amazingly small even between people having published in completely . Fig. 9.1 Undirected networks. (Authors’ own figure) Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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