Find the Density of a Graph
gden computes the density of the graphs indicated by g in collection dat, adjusting for the type of graph in question.
gden(dat, g=NULL, diag=FALSE, mode="digraph", ignore.eval=FALSE)
dat |
one or more input graphs. |
g |
integer indicating the index of the graphs for which the density is to be calculated (or a vector thereof). If |
diag |
boolean indicating whether or not the diagonal should be treated as valid data. Set this true if and only if the data can contain loops. |
mode |
string indicating the type of graph being evaluated. "digraph" indicates that edges should be interpreted as directed; "graph" indicates that edges are undirected. |
ignore.eval |
logical; should edge values be ignored when calculating density? |
The density of a graph is here taken to be the sum of tie values divided by the number of possible ties (i.e., an unbiased estimator of the graph mean); hence, the result is interpretable for valued graphs as the mean tie value when ignore.eval==FALSE. The number of possible ties is determined by the graph type (and by diag) in the usual fashion.
Where missing data is present, it is removed prior to calculation. The density/graph mean is thus taken relative to the observed portion of the graph.
The graph density
Carter T. Butts buttsc@uci.edu
Wasserman, S., and Faust, K. (1994). Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
#Draw three random graphs dat<-rgraph(10,3) #Find their densities gden(dat)
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.