Emergency communications after earthquake reveal social network backbone of important ties

Author:

Jia Jayson S1,Li Yiwei2ORCID,Liu Sheng2,Christakis Nicholas A3ORCID,Jia Jianmin45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Business and Economics, The University of Hong Kong , Hong Kong SAR , China

2. Department of Marketing & International Business, Faculty of Business, Lingnan University , Hong Kong SAR , China

3. Yale Institute for Network Science, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06520 , USA

4. Shenzhen Finance Institute, School of Management and Economics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong , Shenzhen , China

5. Shenzhen Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics for Society , Shenzhen , China

Abstract

Abstract Social networks provide a basis for collective resilience to disasters. Combining the quasi-experimental context of a major earthquake in Ya’an, China, with anonymized mobile telecommunications records regarding 91,839 Ya’an residents, we use initial bursts of postdisaster communications (e.g. choice of alter, order of calls, and latency) to reveal the “important ties” that form the social network backbone. We find that only 26.8% of important ties activated during the earthquake were the strongest ties during normal times. Many important ties were hitherto latent and weak, only to become persistent and strong after the earthquake. We show that which ties activated during a sudden disaster are best predicted by the interaction of embeddedness and tie strength. Moreover, a backbone of important ties alone (without the inclusion of weak ties ordinarily seen as important to bridge communities) is sufficient to generate a hierarchical structure of social networks that connect a disaster zone's disparate communities.

Funder

Research Grants Council of Hong Kong

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Future Networks of Intelligence

Lam Woo Research Fund at Lingnan University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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