Opportunity and choice in social networks
P. Pin, M. Marsili, S. Franz

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to distinguish between opportunity-based and choice-based homophily in social networks, using data on US marriages and school friendships to analyze how minority group size affects observed homophily.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel approach to separate opportunity and choice effects in homophily, addressing a key challenge in social network analysis.
Findings
Homophily persists even in small minority groups, indicating opportunity bias.
The method successfully differentiates between opportunity and choice effects.
Empirical tests on US data support the theoretical framework.
Abstract
Our societies are heterogeneous in many dimensions such as census, education, religion, ethnic and cultural composition. The links between individuals - e.g. by friendship, marriage or collaboration - are not evenly distributed, but rather tend to be concentrated within the same group. This phenomenon, called `imbreeding homophily', has been related to either (social) preference for links with own-type individuals (`choice-based' homophily) or to the prevalence of individuals of her same type in the choice set of an individual (`opportunity-based' homophily). Choices determine the network of relations we observe whereas opportunities pertain to the composition of the (unobservable) social network individuals are embedded in and out of which their network of relations is drawn. In this view, we propose a method that, in the presence of multiple data, allows one to distinguish between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Capital and Networks · Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies · Social and Cultural Dynamics
