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Linked: The New Science of Networks (Unabridged)
 
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Linked: The New Science of Networks (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Albert-Laszlo Barabasi (Author), Henry Leyva (Narrator)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 8 hours and 8 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audible
  • Audible Release Date: 27 Nov 2002
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQF0QI
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From a cocktail party to a terrorist cell, from an ancient bacteria to an international conglomerate - all are networks, and all are part of a surprising scientific revolution. A maverick group of scientists is discovering that all networks have a deep underlying order and operate according to simple but powerful rules. This knowledge promises to shed light on the spread of fads and viruses, the robustness of ecosystems, the vulnerability of economies - even the future of democracy.

Now, for the first time, a scientist whose own work has transformed the study of "links and nodes" takes us inside the unfolding network revolution. Albert-Laszlo Barabasi traces the fascinating history of connected systems, beginning with mathematician Leonhard Euler's first forays into graph theory in the late 1700s and culminating in biologists' development of cancer drugs based on a new understanding of cellular networks.

Combining narrative flare with sparkling insights, Barabasi introduces us to the myriad modern-day "cartographers" mapping networks in a range of scientific disciplines. Aided by powerful computers, they are proving that social networks, corporations, and cells are more similar than they are different. Their discoveries provide an important new perspective on the interconnected world around us.

Linked reveals how Google came to be the Internet's most popular search engine, how Vernon Jordan's social network affects the entire American economy, what it would take to bring down a terrorist organization like al Qaeda, and why an obscure finding of Einstein's could change the way we look at the networks in our own lives. Understanding the structure and behavior of networks will forever alter our world, allowing us to design the "perfect" business or stop a disease outbreak before it goes global.

Engaging and authoritative, Linked provides an exciting preview of the next century in science.

Also available in print from Perseus Publishing.

Executive Producer: Karen DiMattia
Jacket design by Alex Camlin
©2002 Albert-Laszlo Barabasi
(P)2002 Random House, Inc.

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First Sentence
FEBRUARY 7, 2000, SHOULD HAVE BEEN a big day for Yahoo. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
64 of 66 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
This is one of the clearest, most original and most exciting popular-science books I have ever read. It manages to get across the main points of network theory with a minimum of technical jargon, and yet without oversimplification.

Many natural and artificial systems can profitably be viewed as networks in which a number of nodes are connected by links. For many years, the only networks that mathematicians studied were so-called 'random graphs' in which all nodes had more or less the same number of links. But in the late 1990s, when Albert Barabasi, a physicist at the University of Nortre Dame, began to study real networks such as the World Wide Web, he realised that they are rarely structured like random graphs. In most real networks, it turns out, the connectivity distribution decays as a power law - which means that there is no such thing as a 'typical node'. Instead, there are a few highly-connected nodes and many sparsely connected nodes.

Since then, Barabasi and his research team at Notre Dame have found many more examples of networks with this kind of structure, from the metabolic network of protein-protein interactions inside cells, to the social ties that link CEOs in the 'old-boy network'. Despite being composed of very different kinds of element, all these systems share certain interesting properties simply because they have similar structures. In other words, you can discover certain things about a network simply by looking at its connectivity.

All this is fascinating in its own right, but it's even better to get the message 'from the horse's mouth', rather than from a journalist. I've followed the author's papers in Nature with great interest over the past few years, but it was nice to have an overview of the whole field of network theory that stands back and presents the general context as well as the specific details.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
A very accessible book, which gently grounds the reader in the history of graph theory and networks without any pain, and then illustrates the applications and subsequent discoveries of this field through a number of diverse examples - the Internet; Hollywood; corporations; medicine.

There are 40pages of notes in the back of the book which open up a whole world of discovery on how networks can alter thinking and understanding in so many fields of interest.

Given that networks are such a visually appealing topic, it would have been nice to have had more illustrations in this book.

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77 of 81 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Nowadays, everybody talks about networks. Yet, what networks really are and how they function, often remains rather vague in conversations. This book offers great insight into the evolution, the structure and the relevance of networks. The author, Albert Barabási, himself a creative and important
contributor to network science, makes the rapid and fascinating advances made in this field comprehensible.

Our world is filled with complex networks, webs of highly connected nodes. Not all nodes are equal, however. In fact, in many real-world complex networks, there is a typical hierarchy of nodes (called a POWERLAW DISTRIBUTION). This means there are a few extremely well connected nodes (these are called HUBS), there are quite a few moderately connected nodes and there are large numbers of tiny nodes (having very few connections to
other nodes). The Internet, for instance, has only several hubs -like amazon.com and Yahoo - and countless tiny nodes -like my own website :-(.

The structure of networks with a powerlaw distribution is called a SCALEFREE TOPOLOGY. Such a scale free topology is found in networks that 1)are GROWING (extra nodes and links emerge), and 2) are characterised by PREFERENTIAL ATTACHMENT (this means that some links are far more likely to get linked than others). Preferential attachment, is driven by two factors: 1) the number of links the node already has (this is in fact the first mover advantage: a nodes that has been there since the early evelopment of the network gets the biggest chance to get connected), and 2) the node's fitness (for instance a new website offering a truely unique service has an excellent chance to get many links).

A fascinating characteristic of scale free networks is the following. The density of the interconnectivity paradoxically creates two properties at the same time: 1) ROBUSTNESS (removing nodes will not easily lead to the breakdown of the network, precisely because of the fact that all nodes are connected. Only simultaneous removal of the largest hubs will break down the network), and 2) VULNERABILITY TO ATTACK (because of the fact that all nodes are indirectely connected to each other failures, like viruses, can very easily spread through the whole network. This fenomenon is called 'cascading failures'.

Reading this book made me realise that the recently acquired knowledge about networks is revolutionizing many fields of science, like biology, medical science and economics. Also, the practical applications will be numerous, like protecting the internet, fighting terrorist networks, finding a cure for cancer (!), and developing new organizational forms.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Stimulating read
I purchased this book after reading a piece that the author wrote for New Scientist magazine that I found really intriguing. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Sperick
amazingly interesting and well written
This book is just excellent. A great introduction to networks, but also an amazing demonstration of skilled writing. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Rimbalo
incredible
i find this book completely inspiring. it is comprehensive and detailed in it's approach to the topic of networks and it manages to lure the reader along all the way through. Read more
Published on 7 April 2010 by S. Haines
Fascinating and Enlightening
I agree with the first reviewer: this is one of the best popular science books I have ever read.

In addition to the mathematics of networks it also explains a range of... Read more
Published on 19 July 2008 by UK Bookworm
Look closely ...
... because in this book lies the fundamental truth about everything.

Study anything, casually or seriously, and it becomes apparent that there are underlying patterns. Read more
Published on 19 Jan 2008 by Mr. Steven Calvert
Superb popular science: the laws of networks.
Networks all have a meaningful similarity. Whether the network at hand is a party, a cell's molecular reaction, or the puzzling old bridges of Königsberg, Prussia, you could... Read more
Published on 13 April 2007 by Rolf Dobelli
disappointing, not a five star read in my view
I felt moved to write a review for this book when I saw how how highly other readers have rated it. I usually really enjoy popular science books, but I felt that this one was quite... Read more
Published on 10 Sep 2006 by chris
Excellent
This is an excellent explanation of our understanding of networks such as the Internet and the World Wide Web. It takes the ideas of "The Tipping Point" on to a new level.
Published on 13 July 2005 by Poulsden Lacey
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