Nuria Targarona Rifa
@nuriatargarona.bsky.social
21 followers 16 following 2 posts
Predoctoral researcher at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology of the UAB (Spain), working on the ERC Advanced Grant project PATCHWORK "A Network Science Approach to Social Cohesion in Europe". Member of the COALESCE lab.
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nuriatargarona.bsky.social
Our methodological open-access article (co-authors: Louise Ryan & @alexciordia.bsky.social), presenting new interactive visual tools to inductively explore social categorisation and boundary-making processes within personal networks, is out in Sociological Research Online doi.org/10.1177/1360...
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
coalescelab.bsky.social
📢Just published! Yunsub Lee (COALESCE Lab) & Xinwei Xu (@socialnetworkslab.bsky.social) show how incorporating more realistic network features dramatically alters Axelrod’s cultural dynamics model, in their new article in Social Networks: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti... #NetSci #SocialNetworks
Use of aggregated relational data in agent-based modeling
Aggregated relational data (ARD) provides valuable information for inferring structural features of personal social networks at scale. Following recen…
www.sciencedirect.com
nuriatargarona.bsky.social
Our methodological open-access article (co-authors: Louise Ryan & @alexciordia.bsky.social), presenting new interactive visual tools to inductively explore social categorisation and boundary-making processes within personal networks, is out in Sociological Research Online doi.org/10.1177/1360...
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
This article might be particularly appealing for people interested in:
🧩 the biographical consequences of activism
🌐 personal network analysis
⚖️ the tension between social cohesion and polarization
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
Our findings show how political involvement transforms individuals' social environments in complex ways and complicate the view that civil society participation always builds bridges ➡️ In polarized contexts, activism may expand mostly ideologically homogeneous ties but also erode cross-cutting ones.
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
BUT, interestingly, when asked about the consequences, activists were less troubled (although not unaffected) by these ruptures than non-activists.

This is why we call this a "relational toll", a common but acceptable cost of political engagement, likely due to lower aversion to social discomfort.
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
Why does this happen? We explore this qualitatively. When contrasting activists' and non-activists' accounts of their experiences, three dynamics stood up:

1️⃣ Greater identity exposure
2️⃣ Urge for self-disclosure
3️⃣ Need for ideological alignment
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
👉 82% of activists (vs 55% for non-activits) reported at least one damaged/broken tie due to political disagreements
👉 After controlling for many dyadic and individual social & political covariates through multi-level regressions, activists were 6-7 times more likely to experience relationship decay
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
Drawing on 76 personal network interviews and 806 relationships in Catalonia (Spain), a highly polarized context, we found that YES, politicaly-motivated relationship decay is significantly more common among activists 👇
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
We usually think of political engagement and activism as opportunities for new connections and expanding personal networks. But what about the risks of pre-existing relationships being damaged?
Our study asks: are activists more likely to experience politically-motivated relational strain?
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
alexciordia.bsky.social
🚨🚨📢📢 New open-access article (co-authored w/ @nuriatargarona.bsky.social & @mirandalubbers.bsky.social), just out in American Behavioral Scientist:

“The Relational Toll of Political Involvement in Polarized Times: Relationship Decay Within Activists’ Personal Networks” doi.org/10.1177/0002...
Reposted by Nuria Targarona Rifa
mirandalubbers.bsky.social
New paper in Sociological Methodology with @mbojan.sciences.social.ap.brid.gy, @alexciordia.bsky.social, & @nuriatargarona.bsky.social about the measurement properties of aggregated relational data (responses to "how many people do you know who..?") and NSUM estimates: doi.org/10.1177/0081...
This figure shows the distribution of the estimated acquaintanceship network size for the two measurements, and compares the individual estimates for all participants between the measurements. It shows that the estimates are pretty stable for more common sizes, but those with high network sizes ("hubs") fluctuate heavily This figure shows the colorful response card we used for the data collection as a visual aid for respondents. It says "acquaintances are all the people that you know and who know you by SIGHT and by NAME. For instance, you can think of..." followed by 16 boxes for "partner", "family", "friends", "neighbors"; "at work"; "in clubs or associations", "religious community", "education", "people to whom you provide a service"; "social media"; and "other acquaintances". In each box, there is some more help, like "at work" is followed by coworker, boss, employee, client etc. Each box has 1 or 2 icons for further visual aid.