In this post I showed a visualization of the organizational network of my department. Since several people asked for details how the plot has been produced, I will provide the code and some extensions below. The plot has been done entirely in R (2.14.01) with the help of the igraph package. It is a great package but I found the documentation somewhat difficult to use, so hopefully this post can be a helpful introduction to network visualization with R. Here we go: # Load the igraph package (install if needed) require(igraph) # Data format. The data is in ‘edges’ format meaning that each row records a relationship (edge) between two people (vertices). # Additional attributes can be included. Here is an example: # Supervisor Examiner Grade Spec(ialization) # AA BD 6 X # BD CA 8 Y # AA DE 7 Y # … … … … # In this anonymized example, we have data on co-supervision with additional information about grades and specialization. # It is also possible to have the data in a matrix form (see the igraph documentation for details) # Load the data. The data needs to be loaded as a table first: bsk<-read.table(“http://www.dimiter.eu/Data_files/edgesdata3.txt”, sep=’t’, dec=’,’, header=T)#specify the path, separator(tab, comma, …), decimal point symbol, etc. # Transform the table into the required graph format: bsk.network<-graph.data.frame(bsk, directed=F) #the ‘directed’ attribute specifies whether the edges are directed # or equivelent irrespective of the position (1st vs 2nd column). For directed graphs use ‘directed=T’ # Inspect the data:…
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