Educational Intervention Re-Wires Social Interactions in Isolated Village Networks
Marios Papamichalis, Laura Forastiere, Edoardo M. Airoldi, Nicholas A. Christakis

TL;DR
This study used a randomized trial in Honduran villages to show that a health intervention can significantly rewire local social networks, affecting trust and friendship ties without drastically changing overall network structure.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that targeted interventions can modify social ties and influence network dynamics in rural communities.
Findings
Low-dosage intervention reduced trust-based ties.
High-dosage intervention increased social connections.
Intervention reshaped friendship and financial ties without altering global network structure.
Abstract
Social networks shape behavior, disseminate information, and undergird collective action within communities. Consequently, they can be very valuable in the design of effective interventions to improve community well-being. But any exogenous intervention in networked groups, including ones that just involve the provision of information, can also possibly modify the underlying network structure itself, and some interventions are indeed designed to do so. While social networks obey certain fundamental principles (captured by network-level statistics, such as the degree distribution or transitivity level), they can nevertheless undergo change across time, as people form and break ties with each other within an overall population. Here, using a randomized controlled trial in 110 remote Honduran villages involving 8,331 people, we evaluated the effects of a 22-month public health intervention…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCommunity Health and Development · Health disparities and outcomes · Global Maternal and Child Health
