Dynamical Processes on Complex Networks
The availability of large data sets have allowed researchers to uncover complex properties such as large scale fluctuations and heterogeneities in many networks which have lead to the breakdown of standard theoretical frameworks and models. Until recently these systems were considered as haphazard sets of points and connections. Recent advances have generated a vigorous research effort in understanding the effect of complex connectivity patterns on dynamical phenomena. For example, a vast number of everyday systems, from the brain to ecosystems, power grids and the Internet, can be represented as large complex networks. This new and recent account presents a comprehensive explanation of these effects.
- Will interest graduate students and researchers in many disciplines, from physics and statistical mechanics to mathematical biology and information science
- The modular approach allows readers to readily access the sections of most interest to them
- Complicated maths is avoided so the text can be easily followed by non-experts in the subject
Reviews & endorsements
"An excellent introduction book on the statistical mechanics approach of networks... I believe that this book has contributed another step in integrating the vast multi-disciplinary approaches in network science."
Laurent Tambayong, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation
"... the book does a terrific and admirable job at putting some order into the wealth of research that has emerged during the last decade, providing an overview of the current state of the art, and guiding the reader to relevant sources of information. The impressive body of techniques and applications covered in the book gives a resounding answer to the critics, perhaps more convincing than the arguments at the book’s end. This is a fantastic resource book on dynamical processes on complex networks, and its wide scope promises to keep it relevant for several years to come."
Daniel ben-Avraham, Journal of Statistical Physics
"... a very useful book that fills an important gap in the market of books on networks. I will be opening this book whenever I want to start modeling a dynamical process on a network."
Dr Tim Evans, Imperial College London for Contemporary Physics
"The book does a remarkably good job in getting to the mathematical foundations of dynamical processes and complex networks. Hence, it should belong in the bookshelf of any sociologist who is seriously interested in complex and dynamic networks. It gives a great overview of techniques in the field and provides the mathematical depth one wishes for in a manner sociologists can understand. In sum, the book has potential to become a reference like Wasserman and Faust (1994) and offers significant (technical) value to sociologists who seriously want to get into the mathematics behind dynamical processes and complex networks."
Thomas U. Grund, Universite de Montreal for Journal of Mathematical Sociology
Product details
November 2012Paperback
9781107626256
361 pages
245 × 173 × 19 mm
0.67kg
98 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1. Preliminaries: networks and graphs
- 2. Networks and complexity
- 3. Network models
- 4. Introduction to dynamical processes: theory and simulation
- 5. Phase transitions on complex networks
- 6. Resilience and robustness of networks
- 7. Synchronization phenomena in networks
- 8. Walking and searching on networks
- 9. Epidemic spreading in population networks
- 10. Social networks and collective behavior
- 11. Traffic on complex networks
- 12. Networks in biology: from the cell to ecosystems
- 13. Postface: critically examining complex networks science
- Appendixes
- References
- Index.