Community as a Vague Operator: Epistemological Questions for a Critical Heuristics of Community Detection Algorithms
Juni Schindler, Matthew Fuller

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the concept of 'community' in network science, framing it as a vague operator that influences social structures and proposing a reflexive, humble approach to community detection algorithms.
Contribution
It introduces the idea of 'community' as a vague operator and develops a critical heuristics framework for analyzing community detection methods.
Findings
Community acts as a vague operator influencing social relations.
Analysis of the Louvain algorithm reveals ambiguities and controversies.
Proposes a reflexive, humble approach to community detection.
Abstract
In this article, we aim to analyse the nature and epistemic consequences of what figures in network science as patterns of nodes and edges called 'communities'. Tracing these patterns as multi-faceted and ambivalent, we propose to describe the concept of community as a 'vague operator', a variant of Susan Leigh Star's notion of the boundary object, and propose that the ability to construct different modes of description that are both vague in some registers and hyper-precise in others, is core both to digital politics and the analysis of 'communities'. Engaging with these formations in terms drawn from mathematics and software studies enables a wider mapping of their formation. Disentangling different lineages in network science then allows us to contextualise the founding account of 'community' popularised by Michelle Girvan and Mark Newman in 2002. After studying one particular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Information Systems Theories and Implementation
