tengslaneti
Tengslaneti is a term used in network science to denote a relational network that emphasizes the ties between entities rather than just the attributes of the entities themselves. In this sense, a tengslaneti models entities as nodes and the relationships between them as edges. Edges may be directed or undirected, and can carry weights that reflect the strength, frequency, or capacity of the relationship.
Nodes represent actors, objects, concepts, or places, while edges encode interactions such as collaboration, communication, or
Common metrics include degree centrality, betweenness centrality, closeness centrality, and eigenvector centrality, as well as clustering
Applications span social science, information science, biology, economics, and engineering. In sociology, tengslaneti can map kinship,
Constructing a tengslaneti requires data that link entities, such as surveys, transaction records, log files, or
Because networks are often large and dynamic, analysis can be computationally intensive and sensitive to sampling