[Air-L] Interrelations of "Virtual Communities" and"Social Networks"
richard.ling at telenor.com
richard.ling at telenor.com
Fri Sep 14 06:09:19 PDT 2007
Hi,
This is interesting stuff. Is it possible to get a copy of your work?
Rich Ling
-----Original Message-----
From: air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org
[mailto:air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] On Behalf Of Raquel Recuero
Sent: 14. september 2007 14:45
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-L] Interrelations of "Virtual Communities" and"Social
Networks"
Hello. :-)
My thesis was actually about virtual communities in social networks. The
idea was to explore how communities would appear in social networks, but
not considering communities just an structure (as part of literature
does) but also as a group of people with strong ties and social capital
( Rheingold's concept and sociological concepts).
The original point was to track the structure of a cluster in the
network of a social network site (in the end I just analyzed Fotolog,
but I started with weblogs and Orkut as well) through reciprocal social
interaction within the users (comments in fotologs and weblogs and
scraps in Orkut). Then, after observing the network structure and
identifying the nodes in the cluster and their ties, I analyzed the
comments contempt (interaction, social ties and social capital) and
afterwards, the cluster structure within time (dynamics).
Well, there is a lot to talk about that but the conclusions were,
basically:
- it is possibile to find at least 2 types of clusters in fotologs: One
is created through interaction between users and represent a type of
community very close to sociological concepts of VC. Those usually have
strong ties and also strong social capital within users. The second one
is created through association and is not related to social interaction
at all.
- Most of the interaction-centered clusters are strongly related to
geographic spaces and language;
- Users recognize these nodes as their "group of friends" most of the
time.
So, I think virtual communities are a part of social networks as you
said. But I also think there is a very important difference between the
community (the users and their ties) and the space (or system) where
they share these interactions. Orkut, for example, is *not* a virtual
community but it can help people create one. Most of the "communities"
in Orkut, for example, have no interaction between users at all, only
spam. People join these communities as a statement (an addition to their
profile, for example, to show likes and dislikes). So are those *real*
communities? In my opinion, a VC is basically a group of people so,
orkut communities may help them appear, but they are not a VC just
because they exist.
[]s
Raquel
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