Construct Publications

Carley, Kathleen. (1990). Group Stability: A Socio-Cognitive Approach. Advances in Group Processes, Advances in Group Processes: Theory and Research, VII, 1-44. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. [abstract] [link]

Carley, Kathleen. (1991). A Theory of Group Stability. American sociological Review, 56, 331-354. [abstract] [link] 3475kb

Carley, Kathleen & Krackhardt, David. (1996). Cognitive inconsistencies and non-symmetric friendship. Social Networks, 18, 1-27. [link]

Carley, Kathleen. (1996). Communicating New Ideas: The Potential Impact of Information and Telecommunication Technology. Technology in Society, 18, 219-230. [link] 804kb

Kaufer, David & Carley, Kathleen. (1996). The Influence of Print on Social and Cultural Change. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 16, 14-25. [link]

Hill, Vanessa & Carley, Kathleen. (1999). An approach to Identifying consensus in a subfield: The case of organizational culture. Poetics, 27, 1-30. [link] 2315kb

Carley, Kathleen. (1999). On the Evolution of Social and Organizational Networks. special issue of Research in the Sociology of Organizations. on “Networks In and Around Organizations, 16, 3-30. Stanford, CT: JAI Press. [abstract] [link] 3468kb
special issue of Research in the Sociology of Organizations

Carley, Kathleen. (2001). Computational Approaches to Sociological Theorizing. 69-84. [abstract] [link] 1431kb
J. Turner, ed.

Schreiber, Craig & Carley, Kathleen. (2003). The Impact of Databases on Knowledge Transfer: Simulation Providing Theory. NAACSOS Conference 2003, Day 2, Electronic Publication, Pittsburgh, PA, [abstract] [pdf]

Schreiber, Craig & Carley, Kathleen. (2004). Construct - A Multi-agent Network Model for the Co-evolution of Agents and Socio-cultural Enviroments. Construct - A Multi-agent Network Model for the Co-evolution of Agents and Socio-cultural Environments.” Carnegie Mellon University, School of Computer Science, Institute for Software Research International, Technical Report CMU-ISRI-04-109, [pdf]

Schreiber, Craig & Carley, Kathleen. (2004). Key Personnel: Identification and Assessment of Turnover Risk. Proceedings of the NAACSOS 2004 Conference, Pittsburgh, PA, WebSite:http://www.casos.cs.cmu.edu/events/conferences/2004/2004_proceedings/Schreiber,Craig.pdf [pdf]

Moon, Il-Chul & Carley, Kathleen. (2006). Estimating the near-term changes of an organization with simulations. Proceeding of AAAI Fall Symposium, Arlington, VA, Oct 12-15, 2006, 111-118. [link]

Hirshman, Brian & Carley, Kathleen & Kowalchuck, Michael. (2007). Loading Networks in Construct. Institute for Software Research, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, CASOS Technical Report, [pdf]

Moon, Il-Chul & Carley, Kathleen. (2007). Modeling and Simulation of Terrorist Networks in Social and Geospatial Dimensions. IEEE Intelligent Systems, Special issue on Special issue on Social Computing - Sep/Oct '07, 22, 40 - 49. [link]

Moon, Il-Chul & Carley, Kathleen. (2007). Self-Organizing Social and Spatial Networks under What-if Scenarios. AAMAS, Honolulu, Hawaii, 127-134. [link]

Hirshman, Brian & Carley, Kathleen & Kowalchuck, Michael. (2007). Specifying Agents in Construct. Carnegie Mellon University, School of Computer Science, Institute for Software Research, Technical Report CMU-ISRI-07-107., [pdf]

Carley, Kathleen & Diesner, Jana & Reminga, Jeffrey & Tsvetovat, Max. (2007). Toward an Interoperable Dynamic Network Analysis Toolkit. Decision Support Systems, Special Issue on Cyberinfrastructure for Homeland Security: Advances in Information Sharing, Data Mining, and Collaboration Systems, 43, 1324 - 1347. WebSite:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01679236 [link]

Hirshman, Brian & Martin, Michael & Carley, Kathleen. (2008). Modeling Information Access in Construct. Carnegie Mellon University, School of Computer Science, Institute for Software Research, Technical Report CMU-CS-08-115, [pdf]

Hirshman, Brian & Martin, Michael & Birukou, Alaiksandr & Bigrigg, Michael & Carley, Kathleen. (2008). The Impact of Educational Interventions on Real & Stylized Cities. Carnegie Mellon University, School of Computer Science, Institute for Software Research, Technical Report, CMU-CS-08-114, [pdf]