Centrality measure introduction is like finding out who’s the most important kid on the playground.
Imagine you and your friends are playing a game where everyone passes a ball around. The kid who gets the ball the most is probably the one people want to talk to or hang out with, they’re in the middle of everything! That’s centrality, it helps us figure out who is most important or connected in a group.
How It Works
Think of your friends as points on a map, and each time you pass the ball, it's like drawing a line between two points. The more lines someone has, the more they’re involved with others. This is called degree centrality, it counts how many direct connections a person has.
Sometimes, being important isn’t just about having lots of friends, but also about being in the middle of big conversations. That’s like betweenness centrality, if you're the one people go through to talk to others, you’re really central!
So when we use centrality measures, we’re just figuring out who's most important or connected, like finding the main player on the playground!
Examples
- A school bus route where one stop is used by most kids, making it the most central stop in the network.
- In a game of tag, the person who can reach everyone else the fastest is the central player.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does Types Of Centrality - Intro to Algorithms Work?
- How Does Graphs for Kids | Learn all about basic graphs Work?
- How Does Cell Phone Service Work? | T-Mobile?
- How Does BRAIN POWER: From Neurons to Networks Work?
- How Does Math Antics - Data And Graphs Work?