Conference Program
Contact:
Important Dates:
March 1, 2017 – Deadline for Paper Proposals and Fellowships
April 28, 2017 – Early Registration ends
May 31, 2017 – Last Day to Register
Times and panels are subject to change.
Wednesday, June 14
Training Session One: 9:00am to 12:00pm
1) Introduction to Network Theory, Michael Heaney
2) Introduction to ERGM/TERGM, Skyler Cranmer
Lunch: 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Training Session Two: 1:00pm to 4:00pm
1) Introduction to Network Analysis in R, Bruce Desmarais
2) ERGM/TERGM in R, Philip Leifeld
Thursday, June 15
Training Session Three: 9:00am to 12:00pm
1) Network Visualization, Katherine Ognyanova
2) Weighted-Edge ERGMs (GERGM), James Wilson
Lunch: 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Training Session Four: 1:00pm to 4:00pm
1) Network Partitioning, Scott Pauls
2) Latent Factor Models for Dynamic Networks, Shahryar Minhas and Michael Ward
Plenary Talk: 4:30pm to 5:30pm
William P. “Chip” Eveland, Jr. (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1997) is Professor of Communication and (by courtesy) Political Science at The Ohio State University (2000-present). He previously was on the faculty at the University of California at Santa Barbara (1998-2000) and associate researcher for the National Institute for Science Education (1996-1998). Eveland has published over 50 peer-reviewed articles in communication, political science, psychology, and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; his publications have garnered over 2500 citations according to Web of Science. He also has contributed chapters in numerous edited volumes including The Oxford Handbook of Political Communication, The SAGE Handbook of Public Opinion Research, The SAGE Sourcebook of Advanced Data Analysis Methods for Communication Research, The Sourcebook for Political Communication Research, and Communication and Social Cognition. His academic achievements have been recognized with the International Communication Association’s Young Scholar Award (2003) and the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication’s Krieghbaum Under-40 Award (2007), among others.
Eveland’s research focuses on the role of political communication – both mediated and interpersonal – in developing informed and participatory citizens of democracy. Over the past decade his work has highlighted the important role of the structure and content of political communication networks in this process. In doing so, he has employed methods ranging from whole network data, national sample surveys, experimentation, and naturalistic observation. Much of Eveland’s scholarship in this area seeks to contribute to (a) more sophisticated concept explication and measurement of network characteristics, (b) an understanding of the sorts of communication content that flows through political networks; (c) an understanding of the implications of disagreement and difference (including political and racial difference) in discussion networks and their effects on political knowledge and engagement.
Eveland’s plenary talk will highlight the variety of methodological approaches available to scholars of political networks. It will briefly touch on a number of specific studies and their findings with the goal of demonstrating some of the challenges and opportunities that these methods provide for generating a more comprehensive and accurate picture of the creation, modification, and effects of political networks.
Welcome Reception: 5:30pm to 7:00pm
Thursday Local Activity: Pins Mechanical Company
Friday, June 16
Panel Session One: 9:00am to 10:30am
1) Meaning of Networks in Language
The Role of Networks in Explaining Uptake of ICT for Political Communication
Romain Ferrali, Guy Grossman, Melinda Platas Izama, and Jonathan Rodden
Voters of the Year: 19 Voters Who Were Unintentional Election Poll Sensors on Twitter
William Hobbs, Lisa Friedland, Kenneth Joseph, Oren Tsur, Stefan Wojick, and David Lazer
Re-Examining Everyday Political Communication
William Eveland, Anand Sokhey, Ashley Brent, and Chrissy Ladam
Examining the Education Policy Discourse: Efficiency vs. Equity
Nancy Duchesneau, Sarah Reckhow, and Sarah Galey
2) Coordinated Participation and Engagement
The Law of Small Neighborhoods: Coordination in Networks
Marco Pelliccia and Arupratran Daripa
Charismatic Bridging: Network State versus Predictors of Election
Brian Rubineau, Yisook Lim, Michael Neblo, and David Lazer
International Agricultural Development Network Structures Across Multiple Places and Regions
Jessica Rudnick, Meredith Niles, and Mark Lubell
Measuring Political Polarization among the General American Public
Nick Rogers and Jason Jones
3) Environmental Governance
The Role of Social Networks in the Sustainability Transformation of Cabo Pulmo
Alfonso Langle-Flores, Peter Ocelík, and Octavio Pérez-Maqueo
Ratifying Environmental Agreements: A Joint Analysis of Exogenous Influences, Network Dependence, and Spatial Effects
Tobias Bohmelt, Benjamin Campbell, Skyler Cranmer, Bailey Fosdick, and Frank Marrs
Panel Session Two: 10:45am to 12:15pm
1) American Party Networks
The Role of Caucuses in Partisan Entrenchment in Congress
Jen Victor
Nominations and Coalition Politics: Detecting Party Factions in Network Data
Rachel Blum and Hans Noel
Message Diffusion in the Extended Party Network: A Network and Text Approach to Campaign Communication
Michael Kowal
Network Clusters of Thought Leaders on the American Right
Justin Gross
2) Methods: Data Collection
Length Bias in Networks in Unknown Populations: The Case of Lobbying Coalitions
Michael Heaney and Jesse Crosson
Mapping Conceptual Networks
Nicholas Beauchamp, Peter Levine, and Sarah Shugars
All Roads Lead to Lagos: Road Networks and the Legacies of Extractive Colonialism
Philipp Hunziker, Carl Muller-Crepon, Matthew Simonson, Lars-Erik Cederman and David Lazer
Mapping Meaning: Using Text Networks to Model Survey Short Response Text
Meredith Rolfe
3) Discussion Networks
You Disgust Me! Campaigns, Emotions, and Political Discussion Networks
Anand Sokhey, Carey Stapleton, and Jenny Wolak
Contextual Constraints on Discussion Partner Choice and Correct Voting
Talbot Andrews, and John Barry Ryan
Do Ideologically-Mixed Hashtags Signal Cross-Ideological Engagement?
Warren Allen and Shawn Gaulden
Investigating the Dynamic Interplay Between Political Ideology and One's Social Network: A Longitudinal Study of College Freshmen
Paul Stillman, Andrew Luttrell, Skyler Cranmer, and Richard Petty
Mentoring Lunch: 12:15pm to 1:45pm
Panel Session Three: 1:45pm to 3:15pm
1) Homophily in Networks
Does Social Tie Strength Moderate Affective Polarization on Facebook?
Jaime Settle
Polarized Networks? New Evidence on Voters Political Communication Networks
Ross Butters, Chris Hare, and Bob Huckfeldt
Shifting Demographics: Understanding How Ethnically Diverse Networks Influence Hispanics/Latinos' Willingness to Engage in Online and Offline Political Talk
Andrea Quenette and Alcides Velasquez
Inferring Preferences Without Talking: Using Limited Visual Information to Guide Political Discussant Choice Via Homophily
William Eveland, Steven Kleinman, and Jacob Long
2) Methods: Inference
A New Database and Software for Inferring Public Policy Diffusion Networks
Bruce Desmarais, Frederick Boehmke, Mark Brockway, Jeffrey Harden, Scott LaCombe, Frindolin Linder, and Hanna Wallach
Inferential Approaches for Network Analysis: AMEN for Latent Factor Models
Shahryar Minhas and Michael Ward
A Little Jiffy Method for Community Detection in Network Data
Burt Monroe
The Effects of Shocks on Interacting Social Networks: An Agent-Based Model and Experimental Evidence
Zeev Maoz, Keith Burghart, Michelle Phillips, and Luba Levin-Banchik
3) Voting Together
Social Proximity and Friends-and-Neighbors Voting in Local Elections
Matthew Pietryka, Donald DeBats, and Sarah Johns
Understanding Gender and Political Participation: Assessing the Relationship Between Networks and Dispositions
Paul Djupe, Amanda Friesen, and Anand Sokhey
From Chatter to Action: How Social Networks Inform and Motivate in Rural Uganda
Jenn Larson, Janet Lewis, and Pedro Rodriguez
Networks, Turnout, and Strategic Voting in the 2015 Canadian Election
Jack Reilly and Debra Leiter
Panel Session Four: 3:30pm to 5:00pm
1) Congressional Communication and Policymaking Networks
Race, Ethnicity, and Collaboration in Congressional Letter-Marking Networks
Nicole Kalaf-Hughes and Russell Mills
Varying-Coefficient Models for Dynamic Networks
Jihui Lee, Gen Li, and James Wilson
The Role of Social Networks for Women in Politics
Yoonjung Lee and Jesse Hammond
The Name-Dropping Connections of Congress
Lindsey Cormack and Stephen McArdle
2) Collaboration and Governance
Boundaries of a Network or a Boundary of Networks? Dynamic Network Approach to Issue-Specific Latent Networks and Actual Networks of Regional Collaboration
Chang-Gyu Kwak and Richard Feiock
Reconstructing Racist Networks and Communities by Modeling Diffusion of Memes and Language
Oren Tsur and David Lazer
A Network Model for Continuous-Time Textual Communications with Application to Government Email Corpora
Bomin Kim, Zachary Jones, Bruce Desmarais, and Hanna Wallach
Advocacy Coalitions and the Structure of Environmental Policy Networks
Georgia Pfeiffer, Adam Henry, and Thomas Dietz
3) Comparative Political Parties
Leadership in Networks
David Siegel
The Inner Life of Political Parties - How Patronage Networks Influence Leadership
Isabelle Borucki
Revealing Enablers and Dampeners of Party Switching: A Meta Analysis of Network Panel Data
Jose Manuel Magallanes
Poster Setup: 5:00pm to 5:30pm
Poster Session: 5:30pm to 7:30pm
Friday Local Activity: Italian Village Food and Drink Tour
Saturday, June 17
Panel Session Five: 9:00am to 10:30am
1) Social Media, Opinion, and Organizing
A Social network Analysis of the Resistance Twitter Ecology
Jose Marichal, Ryan Mundy, Jack Rockwood, Alex Egertson, and Jinny Milani
Understanding the Effect of the Travel Ban on Non-English Language Tweets in the United States
Bryce Dietrich, Caglar Koylu, Caroline Tolbert, and Courtney Juelich
Experimental and Observational Evidence of Selective Sharing on Social Media
Julia Kamin
Who Protests? Using Social Media Data to Solve Ecological Inference Problems in Studies of Mass Behavior
Paul Zachary, Chris Fariss, and Ted Chen
2) International Relations and Conflict
The Unintended Effects of International Interdependence: An Endogenous Model of Trade Network Formation and Effect
Olga Chyzh
Friends and Enemies: Using Event Data to Detect Positive and Negative Security Communities
Jesse Hammond
External Support Networks in Civil Wars
Elizabeth Menninga
Panel Session Six: 10:45am to 12:15pm
1) Judicial Networks
Leaders and Followers: Mapping the State Supreme Court Citation Network
Shane Gleason, Scott Comparato, and Christine Bailey
Judges to Judges: The Impact of Selection Methods on State Supreme Courts
Kristen Renberg
Assessing the Administrative Law Network
Robert Bond, Michael Nelson, Judkins Mathews, and Chris Fariss
A Network Approach to Influence: Interest Group Composition and Dissensus on the Supreme Court
Sahar Abi-Hassan, Janet Box-Steffensmeier, and Dino Christenson
2) Comparative Legislatures
Networks and Social Influence in European Legislative Politics
Philip Leifeld, Thomas Malang, and Laurence Brandenberger
Inferring Influence Networks from Longitudinal Bipartite Relational Data
Frank Marrs, Benjamin Campbell, Bailey Fosdick, Skyler Cranmer, and Tobias Bohmelt
Measuring and Modeling Accomplishment in Congressional Legislation Networks, 1789-2014
Lefteris Anastasopoulos and Anthony Madonna
Look Who's Talking: Bipartite Networks as Representations of a Topic Model of New Zealand Parliamentary Speeches
Ben Curran, Kyle Higham, Elisenda Ortiz, and Demival Vasques Filho
3) Regional Governance Networks
Institutional Fit and Wildfire Risk Governance
Matthew Hamilton, Paige Fischer, and Alan Ager
Climate Adaptation, Sea-Level Rise, and Complex Governance in San Francisco
Mark Lubell and Matthew Robbins
Understanding the Democratic Potential of Placemaking
Ryan Salzman and Marisa Yerace
Political Homophily and Information Sharing in Urban Water Governance
Emily Bell, Adam Henry, and Gary Pivo
Business Meeting and Lunch: 12:30pm to 1:30pm