Discusses the innovative log-linear model of statistical analysis. This model makes no distinction between independent and dependent variables, but is used to examine relationships among categoric variables by analyzing expected cell frequencies.
Davd Knoke (Ph.D., University of Michigan 1972) coauthored Network Analysis (1982) and has published fifteen books and more than a hundred articles and book chapters, primarily on organizations, networks, politics, and social statistics. He was principal co-investigator on several National Science Foundation-funded projects on voluntary associations, lobbying organizations in national policy domains, and organizational surveys of diverse establishments. A current project on the Global Information Sector examines strategic alliance network evolution among international corporations. At Minnesota, he teaches a graduate network analysis seminar that attracts students from diverse disciplines.
Show moreDiscusses the innovative log-linear model of statistical analysis. This model makes no distinction between independent and dependent variables, but is used to examine relationships among categoric variables by analyzing expected cell frequencies.
Davd Knoke (Ph.D., University of Michigan 1972) coauthored Network Analysis (1982) and has published fifteen books and more than a hundred articles and book chapters, primarily on organizations, networks, politics, and social statistics. He was principal co-investigator on several National Science Foundation-funded projects on voluntary associations, lobbying organizations in national policy domains, and organizational surveys of diverse establishments. A current project on the Global Information Sector examines strategic alliance network evolution among international corporations. At Minnesota, he teaches a graduate network analysis seminar that attracts students from diverse disciplines.
Show moreDavid Knoke (Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1972) is a
professor of sociology at the University of Minnesota, where he
teaches and does research on diverse social networks, including
political, economic, healthcare, intra- and
interorganizational, and terrorist & counterterror networks. In
addition to many articles and chapters, he has written seven books
about networks: Network Analysis (1982, with James Kuklinski), The
Organizational State (1985, with Edward Laumann), Political
Networks (1990), Comparing Policy Networks (1996, with Franz Pappi,
Jeffrey Broadbent, and Yutaka Tsujinaka), Changing Organizations
(2001), Social Network Analysis (2008, with Song Yang), and
Economic Networks (2012).
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