The consequences of unidentifiable individuals for the analysis of an animal social network

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access

openAccess

Embargo end date

Citation

Silk, M.J., Croft, D.P., Jackson, A.L. & Bearhop, S. 2015.,The consequences of unidentifiable individuals for the analysis of an animal social network, Animal Behaviour, 104, 2015, 1 - 11

Abstract

Social network analysis is pervasive in understanding animal social systems, and provides information about how individuals vary in their social strategies. Many long-term studies comprising uniquely marked individuals use social network analysis as an analytical tool. However, the assumption that it is possible to make inferences using network metrics calculated using a subset of the population has yet to be investigated in an animal social network. We use a simulation study of networks derived from social interactions in a typical fluid fissionefusion social system to determine the precision and accuracy of measures of individual social position based on incomplete knowledge. We show that individual social positions measured in partial social networks correlate strongly with positions in the full social network. This correlation typically becomes stronger as the size of the simulated population is increased and is largely not affected by network density. The choice of network metric has an important effect on the precision of partial networks only when they include a small subset of the population and therefore caution is advised using some of these measures in small partial networks. This work demonstrates that valid inferences about individual social position and strategy can be made using partial networks in a wide range of animal social networks, highlighting the value of applying these methods in large long- term study populations.

Description

PUBLISHED

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Type of material: Journal Article