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February 29, 2008

SOCIAL NETWORKS ARE LIKE THE EYE

From Edge:

Christakis185_2 A Talk with Nicholas A. Christakis: It is customary to think about fashions in things like clothes or music as spreading in a social network. But it turns out that all kinds of things, many of them quite unexpected, can flow through social networks, and this process obeys certain rules we are seeking to discover.  We've been investigating the spread of obesity through a network, the spread of smoking cessation through a network, the spread of happiness through a network, the spread of loneliness through a network, the spread of altruism through a network.  And we have been thinking about these kinds of things while also keeping an eye on the fact that networks do not just arise from nothing or for nothing.  Very interesting rules determine their structure.   

Recently, Harvard professor and sociologist Nicholas Christakis has shown that there's more to think about regarding social networks such as Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, and Twitter than considerations of advertising and revenue models.

Each day about 1,700 juniors at an East Coast college log on to Facebook.com to accumulate "friends," compare movie preferences, share videos and exchange cybercocktails and kisses. Unwittingly, these students have become the subjects of academic research. To study how personal tastes, habits and values affect the formation of social relationships (and how social relationships affect tastes, habits and values), a team of researchers from Harvard and the University of California, Los Angeles, are monitoring the Facebook profiles of an entire class of students at one college, which they declined to name because it could compromise the integrity of their research.

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 06:20 AM | Permalink

Comments

Obesity taken alone as an issue, is a slippery road for anyone to tread. And as a problem, obesity is a multifaceted, polymorphous conundrum for any one to try to solve in one fell swoop.

Social networks now, the fiduciary system then, or the set-point theory before --- each have failed us miserably in giving us hope to solve the obesity epidemic.

The solution is evasive, because the causes of obesity are obvious:

Food that is fattening, eaten in excess as stimulators of the pleasure centers in the brain, plus a hypothalamus run amuck it's all it takes.

Even the kid next door, the girl who rides he bicycle past our door every day. The same one who refuses the school lunch in favor of a healthy fare, knows the answer --- that simple --- yet that complicated at face value --- as it happens to seem!

Because, food can act as a drug...

With and without synchrony or social networks --- whatever those are... obesity is a problem in search of a solution.

Something that will not change until we give up our "Fat Land Style" of eating fast food.

Posted by: Felix E. F. Larocca MD | Feb 29, 2008 11:32:28 AM

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