Book Image

Network Science with Python and NetworkX Quick Start Guide

By : Edward L. Platt
Book Image

Network Science with Python and NetworkX Quick Start Guide

By: Edward L. Platt

Overview of this book

NetworkX is a leading free and open source package used for network science with the Python programming language. NetworkX can track properties of individuals and relationships, find communities, analyze resilience, detect key network locations, and perform a wide range of important tasks. With the recent release of version 2, NetworkX has been updated to be more powerful and easy to use. If you’re a data scientist, engineer, or computational social scientist, this book will guide you in using the Python programming language to gain insights into real-world networks. Starting with the fundamentals, you’ll be introduced to the core concepts of network science, along with examples that use real-world data and Python code. This book will introduce you to theoretical concepts such as scale-free and small-world networks, centrality measures, and agent-based modeling. You’ll also be able to look for scale-free networks in real data and visualize a network using circular, directed, and shell layouts. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to choose appropriate network representations, use NetworkX to build and characterize networks, and uncover insights while working with real-world systems.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Contagion – how things spread

So far, it's been a lot of fun calculating numbers and arranging them into nifty little tables, but what's the point? It turns out that properties such as clustering and path length are incredibly important for social processes! In particular, they're important for contagion: the spread of ideas, disease, or anything else that moves from person to person. Understanding how network structure influences the spread of diseases and ideas makes it possible to

Simple contagion

A simple contagion is a social process in which each individual becomes infected after a single exposure. Simple contagions are good models for highly contagious diseases, or the spread of uncontroversial...