The collective vs individual nature of mountaineering: a network and simplicial approach
Sanjukta Krishnagopal

TL;DR
This study uses a network and simplicial complex approach to analyze how relationships among climbers influence cooperation and success in mountaineering, revealing the importance of repeated partnerships and group structure.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simplicial complex framework to quantify relationships and cooperation patterns among climbers, linking network topology to success outcomes.
Findings
Repeated partnerships significantly increase success rates.
Large-dimensional simplexes correlate with higher individual success.
Expedition cooperation varies with group structure and individual traits.
Abstract
Mountaineering is a sport of contrary forces: teamwork plays a large role in mental fortitude and skills, but the actual act of climbing, and indeed survival, is largely individualistic. This work studies the effects of the structure and topology of relationships within climbers on the level of cooperation and success. It does so using simplicial complexes, where relationships between climbers are captured through simplexes that correspond to joint previous expeditions with dimension given by the number of climbers minus one and weight given by the number of occurrences of the simplex. First, this analysis establishes the importance of relationships and shows that chances of failure to summit reduce drastically when climbing with repeat partners. From a climber-centric perspective, climbers that belong to simplexes with large dimension were more likely to be successful, across…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques
