Publication | Open Access
Joint Modeling of Multiple Social Networks to Elucidate Primate Social Dynamics: I. Maximum Entropy Principle and Network-Based Interactions
33
Citations
21
References
2013
Year
EngineeringInteraction NetworkNetwork AnalysisSocial SciencesNetwork DynamicComputational Social ScienceNetwork EvolutionData ScienceBiological NetworkStatisticsSocial Network AnalysisAnimal SocietyBehavioral SciencesJoint ModelingMaximum Entropy PrincipleComplex Behavioral SystemNetwork TheoryMultiple Social NetworksNetwork ScienceComputational NeuroscienceEvolutionary BiologyNeuroscienceHigh-dimensional NetworkComplex Nature
In a complex behavioral system, such as an animal society, the dynamics of the system as a whole represent the synergistic interaction among multiple aspects of the society. We constructed multiple single-behavior social networks for the purpose of approximating from multiple aspects a single complex behavioral system of interest: rhesus macaque society. Instead of analyzing these networks individually, we describe a new method for jointly analyzing them in order to gain comprehensive understanding about the system dynamics as a whole. This method of jointly modeling multiple networks becomes valuable analytical tool for studying the complex nature of the interaction among multiple aspects of any system. Here we develop a bottom-up, iterative modeling approach based upon the maximum entropy principle. This principle is applied to a multi-dimensional link-based distributional framework, which is derived by jointly transforming the multiple directed behavioral social network data, for extracting patterns of synergistic inter-behavioral relationships. Using a rhesus macaque group as a model system, we jointly modeled and analyzed four different social behavioral networks at two different time points (one stable and one unstable) from a rhesus macaque group housed at the California National Primate Research Center (CNPRC). We report and discuss the inter-behavioral dynamics uncovered by our joint modeling approach with respect to social stability.
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