Social network analysis is used widely in the social sciences to
study interactions among people, groups, and organizations, yet
until now there has been no book that shows behavioral biologists
how to apply it to their work on animal populations. "Exploring
Animal Social Networks" provides a practical guide for researchers,
undergraduates, and graduate students in ecology, evolutionary
biology, animal behavior, and zoology.
Existing methods for studying animal social structure focus
either on one animal and its interactions or on the average
properties of a whole population. This book enables researchers to
probe animal social structure at all levels, from the individual to
the population. No prior knowledge of network theory is assumed.
The authors give a step-by-step introduction to the different
procedures and offer ideas for designing studies, collecting data,
and interpreting results. They examine some of today's most
sophisticated statistical tools for social network analysis and
show how they can be used to study social interactions in animals,
including cetaceans, ungulates, primates, insects, and fish.
Drawing from an array of techniques, the authors explore how
network structures influence individual behavior and how this in
turn influences, and is influenced by, behavior at the population
level. Throughout, the authors use two software packages--UCINET
and NETDRAW--to illustrate how these powerful analytical tools can
be applied to different animal social organizations.
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