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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for POPNET
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T184000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T200000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20230512T123227Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230512T123303Z
UID:1091-1688064000-1688068800@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:The anatomy of a population-scale social network
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday 29 June\, POPNET Postdoctoral Researcher Eszter Bokányi will present her work on “The anatomy of a population-scale social network” at Sunbelt 2023\, which will take place in Portland\, Oregon.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/the-anatomy-of-a-population-scale-social-network-5/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T184000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T200000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20230512T123924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230512T124244Z
UID:1099-1688064000-1688068800@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:The small-world structure of a population-scale social network
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday 29 June\, POPNET PI Frank Takes will present his work on “The small-world structure of a population-scale social network” at Sunbelt 2023\, which will take place in Portland\, Oregon.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/the-small-world-structure-of-a-population-scale-social-network-2/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T184000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T200000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20230512T123924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230512T123925Z
UID:1097-1688064000-1688068800@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:Social-economic segregation in a Population-Scale Social Network
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday 29 June\, POPNET PhD candidate Yuliia Kazmina will present her work on “Social-economic segregation in a Population-Scale Social Network” at Sunbelt 2023\, which will take place in Portland\, Oregon.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/social-economic-segregation-in-a-population-scale-social-network/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T213000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230629T225000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20230512T123603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230512T123707Z
UID:1095-1688074200-1688079000@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:Node anonymity in networks: The infectiousness of uniqueness
DESCRIPTION:On Thursday 29 June\, POPNET PhD candidate Rachel de Jong will present her work on “Node anonymity in networks: The infectiousness of uniqueness” at Sunbelt 2023\, which will take place in Portland\, Oregon.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/node-anonymity-in-networks-the-infectiousness-of-uniqueness/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240626T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240629T235959
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20240624T113513Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240624T113516Z
UID:1257-1719360000-1719705599@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:POPNET presents their work during Sunbelt Conference 2024
DESCRIPTION:POPNET proudly joins the 44th edition of the Sunbelt Conference in Edinburgh from 24th June to June 30th 2024. The Sunbelt Conference is part of the International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA)\, providing an interdisciplinary venue for social scientists\, mathematicians\, computer scientists\, ethnologists\, and others to present current work in the area of social networks. \n\n\n\nExploring Social Network Analysis  \n\n\n\nIn alignment with POPNET’s aim to unlock longitudinal social network data on the Dutch population\, this year theme of the Sunbelt 2024 is ‘Networks and Resilience’. Throughout the conference\, various members of POPNET will give talks in the field of social network analysis. Social capital\, network clustering\, and family networks are just a few examples of the topics that will be covered at Sunbelt 2024. \n\n\n\nFind below a list of the titles they will present during the conference: \n\n\n\n\n26 June\, 14:30: “Is Social Capital Good for you?”\, by Heemskerk\, Eelke; Takes\, Frank W. .\n\n\n\n26 June\, 14:30: “Social Network Determinants of Economic Prosperity in a Longitudinal Population-scale Social Network”\, by Kazmina\, Yuliia; Heemskerk\, Eelke; Bokanyi\, Eszter; Takes\, Frank W. .\n\n\n\n27 June\, 8:30: “Parenthood status of siblings\, half-siblings and cousins and entry into parenthood. A horizontal kinship network approach”\, by de Bel\, Vera; Artamonova\, Alyona; Hiraoka\, Takayuki; Danielsbacka\, Mirkka; Tanskanen\, Antti; van Duijn\, Marijtje.\n\n\n\n27 June\, 10:40: “Large and small-scale dynamics of a longitudinal population-scale social network”\, by Bokanyi\, Eszter; Kazmina\, Yuliia; van der Kooij\, Emilia; Takes\, Frank; Heemskerk\, Eelke.\n\n\n\n29 June\, 14:00: “Connectivity and community structure of online and register-based population-scale social networks”\, by Menyhért\, Márton; Bokányi\, Eszter; Corten\, Rens; Heemskerk\, Eelke; Kazmina\, Yuliia; Takes\, Frank W. .
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/popnet-presents-their-work-during-sunbelt-conference-2024/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240627T083000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240627T101000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20240603T113716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240603T113832Z
UID:1249-1719477000-1719483000@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:Parenthood status of siblings\, half-siblings and cousins and entry into parenthood. A horizontal kinship network approach
DESCRIPTION:On June 27\, Vera de Bel\, Alyona Artamonova\, Takayuki Hiraoka\, Mirkka Danielsbacka\, Antti Tanskanen\, Marijtje van Duijn will present their work on “Parenthood status of siblings\, half-siblings and cousins and entry into parenthood. A horizontal kinship network approach” at Sunbelt 2024\, which will take place in at Heriot-Watt University\, Edinburgh. \n\n\n\nAbstract\n\n\n\nHorizontal kinship ties last a lifetime\, and life-course transitions of horizontal kin are known to be interconnected. Prior research\, with a focus on siblings\, has demonstrated their influence on various life events\, including home leaving (Her\, Vergauwen\, & Mortelmans\, 2022)\, marriage and divorce behavior (Buyukkececi & Leopold\, 2021)\, and fertility (Buyukkececi & Leopold\, 2021; Lyngstad & Prskawetz\, 2010). However\, siblings are just one example of individuals’ horizontal kin\, and the impact extends to half-siblings and cousins\, shaping both individual trajectories and those of their relatives. Moreover\, the influence of horizontal kin may vary based on factors such as the degree of relatedness (full siblings\, half-siblings\, or cousins)\, kin’s gender ((half-)brothers\, (half-)sisters\, male or female cousins)\, and lineage (paternal or maternal side of the family). This study seeks to analyze the complete horizontal kinship network to understand how individuals’ entry into parenthood is associated with the parenthood status of their horizontal kin. More specifically\, the study examines whether 1) close kin compared to more distant kin\, 2) female compared to male kin\, and 3) maternal compared to paternal kin have a stronger influence on an individual’s entry into parenthood. Utilizing unique registry data that documents the kinship networks of the entire Dutch (van der Laan\, de Jonge\, Das\, Te Riele\, & Emery\, 2022) and Finnish population\, the study will employ a multi-level model considering the nested structure and dependence of relationships (Snijders & Bosker\, 2012; van Duijn\, 2013). First results and a comparison between the Dutch and Finnish contexts will be presented.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/parenthood-status-of-siblings-half-siblings-and-cousins-and-entry-into-parenthood-a-horizontal-kinship-network-approach/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241018T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20241018T190000
DTSTAMP:20260611T083343
CREATED:20241001T125809Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241009T095143Z
UID:1278-1729245600-1729278000@www.popnet.io
SUMMARY:Increasing mobility is linked to decreasing cohesion of personal networks overthe lifecourse of an entire population
DESCRIPTION:On October 18\, Eszter Bokányi will present her work on “Increasing mobility is linked to decreasing cohesion of personal networks over the lifecourse of an entire population” at the Dutch NetSci Symposium\, which will take place at Eindhoven University of Technology. \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nAbstract\n\n\n\nGrowing accessibility between places and a changing society foster higher human mobility both daily and long-term\, which results in an increased social connectivity between faraway places. Thus\, geographic displacement creates new connections and at the same time rearranges the existing spatial structure of social networks. Both of these mechanisms are little understood in the existing literature of social network formation processes. Moreover\, up until now\, it has also been a challenge to systematically follow the temporal evolution of an entire population’s social network structure. \n\n\n\nIn this work\, we use a unique longitudinal population-scale network dataset sourced from Statistics Netherlands. This network contains family\, work\, school\, household\, and next-door neighbor connections derived from administrative registers\, that together constitute a multilayer social opportunity structure for all residents of the Netherlands between 2009 and 2022. We follow the patterns of individuals’ network surroundings over time\, and measure size\, closure\, and geographical dispersion of ego networks. Size is captured by degree\, closure by excess closure [1]\, which is based on the node clustering coefficient. Geographical dispersion is given by the average distance from network neighbors\, and the average share of network neighbors in the same municipality or the same next-door neighborhood as the ego. \n\n\n\nThe three findings presented in this work are that while the average size of ego networks stays stable over the observed period\, average closure drops by as much as 10%\, and the average distance from network neighbors grows\, while the average share of network neighbors in the same geographic area decreases. We use multivariate regressions to show that the observed decrease in the closure is significantly linked to the growing geographic dispersion\, thus\, the increasing daily and long-term mobility of people. We control for demographic and socio-economic background including the age\, migrant generation\, income\, and whether people attend school and have employment. The regressions confirm that beyond degree and demographics\, variables that capture people’s mobility are linked to the opening up of individual networks. \n\n\n\nThis work is the first of its kind that aims to map the temporal network of an entire population structure comprehensively. As such\, it offers a starting point for a wide variety of impactful network science research at the level of a complete population. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n[1] Bokányi\, E.\, Heemskerk\, E. M.\, & Takes\, F. W. (2023). The anatomy of a population-scale social network. Scientific Reports\, 13(1)\, 9209.
URL:https://www.popnet.io/events/increasing-mobility-is-linked-to-decreasing-cohesion-of-personal-networks-overthe-lifecourse-of-an-entire-population/
CATEGORIES:Conference talk
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