A. Petróczi, T. Nepusz, und F. Bazsó. CONNECTIONS - the official journal of the International Network for Social Network Analysis, 27 (2):
49-57(2006)
Zusammenfassung
Tie-strength has been in the focus of social science research for decades, yet the use of measurement
tools or scales has been relatively scarce. The aim of this study was to fill the gap and
provide a tool that is able to provide a quantitative and continuous measure of tie strength in
social networks. The focus was on virtual communities because the fast expansion of Internet use
and the constant growth of on-line communities provide today’s researchers with an excellent
opportunity for effective and speedy data collection regarding tie-strength measures in these
virtual social groups. The Virtual Tie-Strength Scale (VTS-Scale) consist of 11 questions and it
was developed on a sample of 56 people (3080 asymmetric ties) and tested for reliability of
smaller sample of 16 (204 asymmetric ties) independent sample participation regularly on a
Hungarian discussion board like forum. Reliability coefficients were reassuringly high for both
samples, Cronbach alphas of 0.92 and 0.86, respectively. Data triangulation offered evidence for
scale validity. In summary, the VTS-Scale and its scoring method seem to provide a valid and
reliable measure of tie strength in virtual communities. Although the aim of the research was to
develop a tool that measures tie-strength in virtual communities, the tool can be easily modified
for off-line social groups. The VTS-Scale is also capable of distinguishing between two components
of tie-strength: acquaintances and friendship. However, the content of each component
needs further investigation.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Petroczi_et_al_2006
%A Petróczi, Andrea
%A Nepusz, Tamás
%A Bazsó, Fülöp
%C University of Southern California's Department of Preventive Medicine
%D 2006
%E Valente, Tom
%E Richards, Bill
%I Bill Richards
%J CONNECTIONS - the official journal of the International Network for Social Network Analysis
%K strength social_network relationships
%N 2
%P 49-57
%T Measuring tie-strength in virtual social networks
%U http://www.insna.org/Connections-Web/Volume27-2/Petroczi.pdf
%V 27
%X Tie-strength has been in the focus of social science research for decades, yet the use of measurement
tools or scales has been relatively scarce. The aim of this study was to fill the gap and
provide a tool that is able to provide a quantitative and continuous measure of tie strength in
social networks. The focus was on virtual communities because the fast expansion of Internet use
and the constant growth of on-line communities provide today’s researchers with an excellent
opportunity for effective and speedy data collection regarding tie-strength measures in these
virtual social groups. The Virtual Tie-Strength Scale (VTS-Scale) consist of 11 questions and it
was developed on a sample of 56 people (3080 asymmetric ties) and tested for reliability of
smaller sample of 16 (204 asymmetric ties) independent sample participation regularly on a
Hungarian discussion board like forum. Reliability coefficients were reassuringly high for both
samples, Cronbach alphas of 0.92 and 0.86, respectively. Data triangulation offered evidence for
scale validity. In summary, the VTS-Scale and its scoring method seem to provide a valid and
reliable measure of tie strength in virtual communities. Although the aim of the research was to
develop a tool that measures tie-strength in virtual communities, the tool can be easily modified
for off-line social groups. The VTS-Scale is also capable of distinguishing between two components
of tie-strength: acquaintances and friendship. However, the content of each component
needs further investigation.
@article{Petroczi_et_al_2006,
abstract = {Tie-strength has been in the focus of social science research for decades, yet the use of measurement
tools or scales has been relatively scarce. The aim of this study was to fill the gap and
provide a tool that is able to provide a quantitative and continuous measure of tie strength in
social networks. The focus was on virtual communities because the fast expansion of Internet use
and the constant growth of on-line communities provide today’s researchers with an excellent
opportunity for effective and speedy data collection regarding tie-strength measures in these
virtual social groups. The Virtual Tie-Strength Scale (VTS-Scale) consist of 11 questions and it
was developed on a sample of 56 people (3080 asymmetric ties) and tested for reliability of
smaller sample of 16 (204 asymmetric ties) independent sample participation regularly on a
Hungarian discussion board like forum. Reliability coefficients were reassuringly high for both
samples, Cronbach alphas of 0.92 and 0.86, respectively. Data triangulation offered evidence for
scale validity. In summary, the VTS-Scale and its scoring method seem to provide a valid and
reliable measure of tie strength in virtual communities. Although the aim of the research was to
develop a tool that measures tie-strength in virtual communities, the tool can be easily modified
for off-line social groups. The VTS-Scale is also capable of distinguishing between two components
of tie-strength: acquaintances and friendship. However, the content of each component
needs further investigation.},
added-at = {2007-01-19T13:33:31.000+0100},
address = {University of Southern California's Department of Preventive Medicine},
author = {Petróczi, Andrea and Nepusz, Tamás and Bazsó, Fülöp},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/25bf88ec7b6aa06e417171380a9166c21/bluedolphin},
editor = {Valente, Tom and Richards, Bill},
interhash = {14c2c88a2bb9fc2d59cbc5e0f3bb5bc7},
intrahash = {5bf88ec7b6aa06e417171380a9166c21},
journal = {CONNECTIONS - the official journal of the International Network for Social Network Analysis},
keywords = {strength social_network relationships},
number = 2,
pages = {49-57},
publisher = {Bill Richards},
timestamp = {2007-01-19T13:33:31.000+0100},
title = {Measuring tie-strength in virtual social networks},
url = {http://www.insna.org/Connections-Web/Volume27-2/Petroczi.pdf},
volume = 27,
year = 2006
}