The small-world effect is a modern phenomenon
Seth A. Marvel, Travis Martin, Charles R. Doering, David Lusseau, and, M. E. J. Newman

TL;DR
The paper argues that the small-world effect in social networks is a recent phenomenon, demonstrated through historical disease spread patterns indicating that long-distance contacts were rare until recent centuries.
Contribution
It provides historical evidence that the small-world property in social networks emerged only in the last few hundred years, based on epidemiological modeling of disease spread like the Black Death.
Findings
Wave-like disease spread implies long chains of contacts.
Long-distance contacts were exponentially rare historically.
Small-world networks are a recent development.
Abstract
The "small-world effect" is the observation that one can find a short chain of acquaintances, often of no more than a handful of individuals, connecting almost any two people on the planet. It is often expressed in the language of networks, where it is equivalent to the statement that most pairs of individuals are connected by a short path through the acquaintance network. Although the small-world effect is well-established empirically for contemporary social networks, we argue here that it is a relatively recent phenomenon, arising only in the last few hundred years: for most of mankind's tenure on Earth the social world was large, with most pairs of individuals connected by relatively long chains of acquaintances, if at all. Our conclusions are based on observations about the spread of diseases, which travel over contact networks between individuals and whose dynamics can give us…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · COVID-19 epidemiological studies
