Sociomapping
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Sociomapping is a method developed for
Thanks to its visual coding Sociomapping engages our evolved skills for
History
The sociomapping method was developed in 1993–1994 by R. Bahbouh as a tool that would facilitate understanding of data about social relations and help preventing conflicts within teams of military professionals. The first major application of sociomapping took place in 1994–1995 during the HUBES experiment (Human Behavior in Extended Spaceflight) – a 135-day-long simulation of a spaceflight with three crew members organized by
Basic principle
The basic principle of Sociomapping is transforming original data concerning a set of objects in such a way that the distance of each pair of objects on the map corresponds to the distance between the two objects in the underlying data. Transformation of the data is a matter of 1) choosing some metric that could be reasonably interpreted as distance, and 2) translating the multi-dimensional distance matrix into 2D coordinate system so that the correlation between map-distances and data-distances is maximized.
The algorithm for data-transformation, developed by C. Höschl jr., is a dimensionality-reduction technique, such as PCA, and its goodness of fit can be measured by Spearman correlation between the map-distances and data-distances.
Sociomapping takes into account that, particularly in case of social relations, relational data may be asymmetrical (e.g. John like Mary more than she likes him) and preserves this information by mapping the objects in such a way that for each object the closest other object is the one closest to it according to the metric of choice in the underlying data, and so on for other objects ordered by distance.
Application
There are two main areas of application for Sociomapping – groups (small systems) and populations (large systems). For each area a different method of visualization and data transformation is used in order to facilitate people’s ability to understand and interpret the analyzed data.
Groups and small systems
Sociomapping for small systems produces Sociomaps of subjects. These subjects (in most cases people) are placed on the Sociomap reflecting their distance measured in various ways:
- social distance
- psychological distance (psychological similarity)
- communication distance
- other relation measures
Besides the distances between the group members, Sociomap shows additional variable coded in the height (or color) of the subject. Typical variables used for the height are: social status,
Understanding the relative distances between the people helps to understand the structure of the group, find subgroups formed by groups members and discover functions of the group members. In connection to the height Sociomap enables complex and comprehensive insight into the groups and small systems. This is particularly beneficial for workplace strategists.
Sociomapping of small systems produces similar results to social network analysis with additional visualization features.
Profile analysis
Besides the small systems analysis based on various relational data, Sociomapping can be used to visualize the profiles of unrelated subjects. This is done by transformation of subjects' profiles, computing the distances between the profiles and visualizing them in a Sociomap.
There is a software to compute Profile analysis (see section Sociomapping software).
Populations and large systems
For large systems and populations, different type of Sociomaps is used. Data used for these type of maps are rectangular
Typical uses for Large systems Sociomapping are:
- political research (preferences and polls)
- marketing research (attitudes and product preferences)
- customer segmentation(behavioral patterns)
- and other research concerned with preferences and/or attitudes.
Broader scope of application
Sociomapping has broader scope of application, including the following fields:
- Historical events analysis (e.g. RMS Titanicsurvival rate)
- profile similarity)
- Shakespeare plays)
- Military units and human spaceflight crews analysis
- Sport analysis and forecast (e.g. cooperation of sport teams)
- Politics analysis and forecast
- Team building
- Team analysis (communication, cooperation, decision-making)
- Leadership development
- Team collaboration – remote collaboration or hybrid teams
- Prevention of socio-pathological behavior among children at schools
Software
So far only one software tool based on Sociomapping was released.
Team profile analyzer is a tool for psychologists, consultants, managers and HR specialists. It enables integration of various sources of information about team from personality, performance or knowledge tests and biographical data. It can be used for team analysis and development: team coaching, team building, recruitment etc.
See also
- Participatory rural appraisal
- High-performance teams
- Human resources
- Marketing research
- Sociometry
- Team management