Network Science: Theory and Applications

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Wiley, Mar 11, 2009 - Computers - 524 pages

A comprehensive look at the emerging science of networks

Network science helps you design faster, more resilient communication networks; revise infrastructure systems such as electrical power grids, telecommunications networks, and airline routes; model market dynamics; understand synchronization in biological systems; and analyze social interactions among people.

This is the first book to take a comprehensive look at this emerging science. It examines the various kinds of networks (regular, random, small-world, influence, scale-free, and social) and applies network processes and behaviors to emergence, epidemics, synchrony, and risk. The book's uniqueness lies in its integration of concepts across computer science, biology, physics, social network analysis, economics, and marketing.

The book is divided into easy-to-understand topical chapters and the presentation is augmented with clear illustrations, problems and answers, examples, applications, tutorials, and a discussion of related Java software. Chapters cover:

  • Origins
  • Graphs
  • Regular Networks
  • Random Networks
  • Small-World Networks
  • Scale-Free Networks
  • Emergence
  • Epidemics
  • Synchrony
  • Influence Networks
  • Vulnerability
  • Net Gain
  • Biology

This book offers a new understanding and interpretation of the field of network science. It is an indispensable resource for researchers, professionals, and technicians in engineering, computing, and biology. It also serves as a valuable textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in related fields of study.

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About the author (2009)

T. G. Lewis is Professor of Computer Science at the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA. He has written over thirty books during the course of his extensive career. Dr. Lewis is the former vice president of development for Eastman Kodak.

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