Bridge Nodes: Difference between revisions
Created page with "thumb|alt=A screenshot of a Signal conversation where someone has sent me a message telling me that I'm the only reason they have idiots on their Twitter feed|Look at me. I am the bridge node now. If you modeled human relationships as an undirected graph, you'd probably find a bunch of communities, subgraphs of the relationships that are highly clustered...." |
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If you modeled human relationships as an undirected graph, you'd probably find a bunch of [[wikipedia:Community structure|communities]], subgraphs of the relationships that are [[wikipedia:Clustering coefficient|highly clustered]]. There's a lot of research into this stuff, but when you're in one of these you don't often realize when you are a [[wikipedia:Bridge (graph theory)|bridge node]]. | If you modeled human relationships as an undirected graph, you'd probably find a bunch of [[wikipedia:Community structure|communities]], subgraphs of the relationships that are [[wikipedia:Clustering coefficient|highly clustered]]. There's a lot of research into this stuff, but when you're in one of these you don't often realize when you are a [[wikipedia:Bridge (graph theory)|bridge node]]. | ||
This often means, in a memetic sense, that information traversal will often occur or not occur solely through your action. In some ways this is good. My wife is my bridge node to communities of more working class people<ref>I moved to the US with an advanced degree and worked in tech, meeting most of my friends in tech | This often means, in a memetic sense, that information traversal will often occur or not occur solely through your action. In some ways this is good. My wife is my bridge node to communities of more working class people<ref>I moved to the US with an advanced degree and worked in tech, meeting most of my friends in tech</ref>. And that's been good since I have a little more understanding of people's lives outside of my San Francisco bubble, and many of my friends have no conception of that. | ||
But often the way it manifests is that I transmit some [[memetic virus]] to my friends who are otherwise not within its area of transmission. Commonly, this is some sort of outrage-bait of some sort or the other. So if you're one of those, you can often improve a community substantially by just choosing to firewall appropriately. | But often the way it manifests is that I transmit some [[memetic virus]] to my friends who are otherwise not within its area of transmission. Commonly, this is some sort of outrage-bait of some sort or the other. So if you're one of those, you can often improve a community substantially by just choosing to firewall appropriately. | ||
Alternatively, I suppose, you could just mute the acquaintance of yours who is causing this. | Alternatively, I suppose, you could just mute the acquaintance of yours who is causing this. |
Revision as of 18:32, 16 March 2024
If you modeled human relationships as an undirected graph, you'd probably find a bunch of communities, subgraphs of the relationships that are highly clustered. There's a lot of research into this stuff, but when you're in one of these you don't often realize when you are a bridge node.
This often means, in a memetic sense, that information traversal will often occur or not occur solely through your action. In some ways this is good. My wife is my bridge node to communities of more working class people[1]. And that's been good since I have a little more understanding of people's lives outside of my San Francisco bubble, and many of my friends have no conception of that.
But often the way it manifests is that I transmit some memetic virus to my friends who are otherwise not within its area of transmission. Commonly, this is some sort of outrage-bait of some sort or the other. So if you're one of those, you can often improve a community substantially by just choosing to firewall appropriately.
Alternatively, I suppose, you could just mute the acquaintance of yours who is causing this.
- ↑ I moved to the US with an advanced degree and worked in tech, meeting most of my friends in tech