Login
Registrati
Reimposta password
Pubblica & Distribuisci
Soluzioni Editoriali
Soluzioni di Distribuzione
Temi
Architettura e design
Arti
Business e Economia
Chimica
Chimica industriale
Farmacia
Filosofia
Fisica
Geoscienze
Ingegneria
Interesse generale
Legge
Letteratura
Linguistica e semiotica
Matematica
Medicina
Musica
Scienze bibliotecarie e dell'informazione, studi library
Scienze dei materiali
Scienze della vita
Scienze informatiche
Scienze sociali
Sport e tempo libero
Storia
Studi classici e del Vicino Oriente antico
Studi culturali
Studi ebraici
Teologia e religione
Pubblicazioni
Riviste
Libri
Atti
Editori
Blog
Contatti
Cerca
EUR
USD
GBP
Italiano
English
Deutsch
Polski
Español
Français
Italiano
Carrello
Home
Riviste
Connections
AHEAD OF PRINT
Accesso libero
Making Personal Networks with a Computer: Lessons from the Field using Vennmaker
Ignacio Fradejas-García
Ignacio Fradejas-García
e
Francisca Ortiz Ruiz
Francisca Ortiz Ruiz
| 20 lug 2024
Connections
AHEAD OF PRINT
INFORMAZIONI SU QUESTO ARTICOLO
Articolo precedente
Articolo Successivo
Sommario
Articolo
Immagini e tabelle
Bibliografia
Autori
Articoli in questo Numero
Anteprima
PDF
Cita
CONDIVIDI
Article Category:
Article
Pubblicato online:
20 lug 2024
Pagine:
-
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21307/connections-2019.036
Parole chiave
Vennmaker
,
personal networks
,
case study
,
data collection
,
data analysis
,
mixed methods
© 2024 Ignacio Fradejas-García et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Figure 1:
At left, anonymized personal network of an international (expat) aid worker made with paper, sticky notes and colored pencils. The inner circle is for ego’s household, the outer circles, which are inside out and in order, locate alters living in the same city, alters living in other cities in Turkey, and alters living elsewhere in the world, i.e. outside Turkey. The circles are divided into three parts: living, working and working-living environment. Alters are organized within three main categories of sticky notes, distinguished by color: friends in green, relatives in blue, working colleagues in orange. Then the interviewee was asked which alters are expats, Syrians or Turkish, their sex/gender, and whether they were aid-workers. The interview was audio-recorded. On the right is the same network from the left, but done in Vennmaker and simplifying some of the circle divisions to ease the placing of alters. Source: elaborated by first author.
Figure 2:
Notes for the three networks: The inner circle is for people living in the same city (Gaziantep), while the outer circle locates alters living outside it. The green area is for friends, purple for co-workers and orange for family. Closeness is symbolized by the size of the circle representing each person. Relations in which each member knows the other are represented by lines connecting alters. Source: elaborated by first author.
Figure 3:
Social-support networks in Javiera in 2019. The left-hand network is the support from ego to alter, the right-hand one the support from alter to ego. I measured the material aid, level of intimacy, advice, physical assistance, feedback, positive social interaction, and negative social interactions. Each type of support is represented using one color (in the same order): light blue, pink, yellow, brown, blue, green, and red. Source: elaborated by the second author.