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Main Authors: González-Casado, Miguel A., Sánchez, Angel, Fortunato, Santo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.16399
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author González-Casado, Miguel A.
Sánchez, Angel
Fortunato, Santo
author_facet González-Casado, Miguel A.
Sánchez, Angel
Fortunato, Santo
contents We study the structure of personal relationships among 1068 high school students using a dataset that contains the network of self-reported friendly and conflictive relationships, with information on their directionality and intensity. We analyse the resulting weighted, directed, and signed network using a Bayesian stochastic block model framework, which enables the inference of group structure without imposing prior assumptions on the role of negative or asymmetric ties. While a full model incorporating all edge attributes yields statistically coherent clusters, these do not align with socially meaningful communities. To address this, we focus first on the network backbone of mutual affinities, and we characterize its group organization. Many communities display an assortative structure, often embedded within larger cohesive configurations, but we also observe more diverse patterns such as core-periphery structure and isolated nodes. We then examine how relationship intensity, directionality, and conflict shape group structure. Asymmetric ties, though often occurring between communities, are frequently present within them, revealing the stabilizing effect of group membership on non-mutual relationships. Furthermore, the presence of asymmetric ties does not inherently imply a hierarchical structure, given that all groups both receive and report significant levels of non-reciprocal ties. More intense ties play a disproportionate role in shaping community structure. Finally, negative ties tend to bridge communities, but we find that groups feature a significant level of internal conflict. Our research offers a new perspective on the study of group organization when rich information about the directionality, the intensity and the sign of ties is considered, with implications for identifying social vulnerability and designing targeted interventions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_16399
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle What defines a group of friends? Rethinking community structure in signed, directed networks
González-Casado, Miguel A.
Sánchez, Angel
Fortunato, Santo
Physics and Society
We study the structure of personal relationships among 1068 high school students using a dataset that contains the network of self-reported friendly and conflictive relationships, with information on their directionality and intensity. We analyse the resulting weighted, directed, and signed network using a Bayesian stochastic block model framework, which enables the inference of group structure without imposing prior assumptions on the role of negative or asymmetric ties. While a full model incorporating all edge attributes yields statistically coherent clusters, these do not align with socially meaningful communities. To address this, we focus first on the network backbone of mutual affinities, and we characterize its group organization. Many communities display an assortative structure, often embedded within larger cohesive configurations, but we also observe more diverse patterns such as core-periphery structure and isolated nodes. We then examine how relationship intensity, directionality, and conflict shape group structure. Asymmetric ties, though often occurring between communities, are frequently present within them, revealing the stabilizing effect of group membership on non-mutual relationships. Furthermore, the presence of asymmetric ties does not inherently imply a hierarchical structure, given that all groups both receive and report significant levels of non-reciprocal ties. More intense ties play a disproportionate role in shaping community structure. Finally, negative ties tend to bridge communities, but we find that groups feature a significant level of internal conflict. Our research offers a new perspective on the study of group organization when rich information about the directionality, the intensity and the sign of ties is considered, with implications for identifying social vulnerability and designing targeted interventions.
title What defines a group of friends? Rethinking community structure in signed, directed networks
topic Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.16399