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Book Review(正式书评兼答问): Network Science—Theory and Application

已有 6507 次阅读 2010-5-22 08:29 |个人分类:学术交流|系统分类:观点评述|关键词:学者| Science

asi_21242_Rev_EV.tex 18/11/2009 11: 48 Page 1

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 61(2):1–2, 2010

asi_21242_Rev_EV.tex 18/11/2009 11: 48 Page 2

 

Book Review

 

Network Science—Theory andApplication.

Ted G. Lewis. Hoboken,NJ: JohnWiley&Sons, Inc., 2009. 512 pp.

$110.00 (hardcover). (ISBN:978-0470331880).

 

To my knowledge, the emerging field of network science began after

1998 (Watts&Strogatz, 1998), and only a few books and review articles

or special reports named after “Network Science” have been published

world-wide (Barabasi, 2002; Committee on Network Science for Future

ArmyApplications, 2005; Fang, 2008a, 2006b; Fang,Wang, Zhen, et al.,

2007; Wang, Li, & Chen, 2006; Watts, 2003, 2004; Watts & Strogatz,

1998; Zeng, 2006). The words “network science” or “new science of

networks” first appeared in the United States (Barabasi, 2002; Committee

on Network Science for Future Army Applications, 2005;Watts,

2003, 2004), followed by China (Chen&Xu, 2008; Fang, 2008a, 2008b;

Fang et al., 2007; Guo & Xu, 2006;Wang, Xiang, & Chen, 2006; Zeng,

2006) and others. However, “network science” already had been used

by Professor Ted G. Lewis for his book, published by John Wiley &

Sons, Inc., which was perhaps the first comprehensive and representative

book on network science published in the United States. Although

common features of these types of books are the theory and methodology

from network science and their extensive applications to various

interdisciplinary areas, each book has its unique viewpoints and distinguishing

features. Here, I would like to provide my personal review on

the remarkable merits of this book, which deserve special attention.

Thirteen chapters include key issues with exercises, except for the

chapter 1. The first chapter describes the timeline of significant events

of network science development, from graph theory (particularly random

graphs) to modern network theory and its applications, and is to

my knowledge the most complete description about network history.

I agree that the history of network science has three milestones (Euler

graph theory, Erdos-Renyi random graph theory, and modern network

science), corresponding to three time periods (1736–1936, 1950–1990,

and 1998–present), as the book shows.

There is an abstractlike introduction to summarize and note the most

important part of each chapter. The first half of this book traces the

development of network science along a trail blazed by the pioneers

and inventors. This makes readers easily understand the objectives.

The book describes each issue (chapter) of network science through

the use of illustrations, tables, practical problems with solutions, case

studies, and applications to related Java software (There are five major

Java applications for demonstration.), where the latter is quite different

from all other books on the subject. The first six chapters develop the

field from its graph-theory root to the modern definition of a network.

These chapters are devoted to the most well-known classes: regular, random,

small-world, and scale-free networks. All materials are adequately

described and presented.

Chapter 7 describes “emergence,” a concept with extensive and

profound meaning about complex systems and networks. Searching

for emergence has been one of the very important and interesting

issues for complex network theory and interdisciplinary science. What

is emergence, and what is network emergence? This is one significant

subject and phenomenon arising from complex systems and networks.

The book gives a definition of network emergence, which is more than

a network’s transformation from an initial state to the final state. In

physical and biological sciences, emergence is a concept of some new

phenomena arising from a system that were not initially in the system’s

specification. This book’s definition refers to the repeated application

of microrules that result in an unexpected macrostructure that hints at a

key point. The book gives a brief explanation and is easy to understand.

It also introduces newself-organizing principles for networks and shows

How to custom-design networks with an arbitrary degree sequence distribution

that may help people design faster, more resilient communication

networks and revise some associated networks.

The second half of this book, chapters 8 to 13, briefly describes several

important issues from a practical application point of view, with

further studies. Chapter 8, “Epidemics,” may excite new endeavors of

designing antigen countermeasures for the Internet, and can be used to

explain human epidemics as well as epidemics that sweep across the

Internet. Chapter 9 describes “synchrony,” an issue that has received a

great deal of attention in the past in the studies of complex networks,

but this book gives only a brief description. In chapter 10, “Influence

Networks,” the author proposes what conditions must be met for a

social network to come to consensus. Chapter 11, “Vulnerability,” shows

how networks might be attacked, which may be used on a daily basis to

valuate critical infrastructure and protect against natural and synthetic

attacks. Chapter 12, “Netgain,” is an exploration of a business model

and introduces some classical market models as reference. In chapter

13, “Biology,” the reader is introduced to the exciting new field of

protein-expression networks and suggests new directions for the reader

to consider. It emphasizes both static and dynamical analysis as well

as the relationship of dynamics with structure and function, where the

latter is the most fascinating application of network science today.

As mentioned in the preface, “This book is a start, but it also leaves

many questions unanswered.”Yes, some important issues have not been

addressed, such as information networks, swarm aggregation or flocking

of multiple agents, weighted nonlinear evolution networks, social

networks, network centric warfare, and so on. However, I believe that

researchers, professionals, and technicians in engineering, computer science,

and biology will benefit from an overview of new concepts in

network science. It also may inspire a new generation of investigators

and researchers.

In summary, the book is a valuable reference, with practicability

especially for engineering and graduate students, although some more

theoretical subjects or deep-level problems could be added to strengthen

and improve its quality and presentation.

Finally, I may mention that the cover of the book is “Network

Science: Theory and Application,” but it is “Network Science: Theory

and Practice” on the opening page. Why is that? A correction may be

needed.

References

Barabasi, A.L. (2002). The new science of networks. Cambridge, United

Kingdom: Perseus.

Chen, G.R., & Xu, X.M. (Ed.). (2008). Complex networks theory and

application [in Chinese]. Shanghai: Shanghai System Science Press.

Committee on Network Science for Future Army Applications, Board on

Army Science and Technology, Division on Engineering and Physical

Science, National Research Council of The National Academies. (2005).

Network science.Washington, DC: National Academic Press.

Fang, J.-Q. (2008a). Mastering beam halo and exploring network science [in

Chinese]. Beijing: Atomic Energy Press.

Fang, J.-Q. (Ed.). (2008b). Proceedings of CCAST (World Laboratory)

Workshop: 4rth Chinese National Forum on Network Science and Graduate

Student Summer School, CCAST—WLWorkshop Series:WULUME

191, Qing Daun, China.

Fang, J.-Q., Wang, X.-F., Zhen, Z.-G., Li, X., Di, X.-L., & Bi, Q. (2007).

New interdisciplinary science: Network science. Progress in Physics I [in

Chinese], 27(3), 239–343; (II), 2007, 27(4), 361–448.

Guo, L., & Xu, X.-M. (Ed.). (2006). Complex network [in Chinese].

Shanghai: Shanghai Science and Technology Press.

Wang, X.-F., Li, X.,&Chen, G.R. (2006). Complex networks and application

[in Chinese]. Beijing: Qing Hua University Press.

Watts, D.J. (2003). Six degrees: The science of a connected age. NewYork:

Norton.

Watts, D.J. (2004). The “new” science of networks. Annual Review of

Sociology, 30, 243–270.

Watts, D.J., & Strogatz, S.H. (1998). Remarkable interdiciplinary science—

Network science. Nature, 393, 440–442.

Zeng, X.Z. (Ed.). (2006). Network science [in Chinese]. Beijing: Military

Science Press.

 

                                    Jin-Qing Fang

                                     China Institute of Atomic Energy,

                                     Beijing 102413

                                     China

                                     E-mail: fangjinqing@gmail.com

                                     Published onlineXXXinWiley InterScience

                                     (www.interscience.wiley.com).

                                     10.1002/asi.21142

Book Review: Network Science—Theory and Application

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY—February 2010

DOI: 10.1002/asi

 



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