Homophily and Contagion Are Generically Confounded in Observational Social Network Studies
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Abstract
The authors consider processes on social networks that can potentially involve three factors: homophily, or the formation of social ties due to matching individual traits; social contagion, also known as social influence; and the causal effect of an individual's covariates on his or her behavior or other measurable responses. The authors show that generically, all of these are confounded with each other. Distinguishing them from one another requires strong assumptions on the parametrization of the social process or on the adequacy of the covariates used (or both). In particular the authors demonstrate, with simple examples, that asymmetries in regression coefficients cannot identify causal effects and that…
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2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Homophily
- Imitation
- Covariate
- Simple (philosophy)
- Econometrics
- Constructive
- Social network (sociolinguistics)
- Mimicry
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
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