To read this content please select one of the options below:

Sequence-Network Analysis: A New Framework for Studying Action in Groups

Advances in Group Processes

ISBN: 978-1-78560-077-7, eISBN: 978-1-78560-076-0

Publication date: 8 July 2015

Abstract

Purpose

The ability to analyze social action as it unfolds on micro time scales – particularly the 24-hour day – is central to understanding group processes. This chapter describes a new approach to this undertaking, which treats individuals’ involvement in specific activities at specific times as bases for: (1) sequential linkages between activities; as well as (2) connections to others who engage in similar action sequences. This makes it possible to examine the emergence and internal functioning of groups using existing network analysis techniques.

Methodology/approach

We illustrate this approach with a specific application – a quantitative and visual comparison of the daily activity patterns of employed and unemployed people. We use data from 13,310 24-hour time diaries from the 2010–2013 American Time Use Surveys.

Findings

Employed and unemployed people engage in significantly different types of activities and at different times. Beyond this, network analyses reveal that unemployed individuals experience much lower levels of synchrony with each other than do employed individuals and have much less organized action sequences. In short, there is a chronic lack of prevailing norms regarding how unemployed people organize the 24-hour day.

Research implications

Future research that uses time-stamped data can employ network methods to analyze and visualize how group members sequence and synchronize social action. These methods make it possible to study how the structure of social action shapes group and individual-level outcomes.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

For providing useful suggestions and guidance that improved this project, we thank Erin York Cornwell, Jonathan Gershuny, Edward O. Laumann, Daniel Della Posta, Jeremy Schulz, and audience members at the 2014 Centre for Time Use Research symposium at St. Hugh’s College, University of Oxford, where an earlier draft of this chapter was presented.

Citation

Cornwell, B. and Watkins, K. (2015), "Sequence-Network Analysis: A New Framework for Studying Action in Groups", Advances in Group Processes (Advances in Group Processes, Vol. 32), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 31-63. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0882-614520150000032002

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015 Emerald Group Publishing Limited