Author: Luis, Angela D.; O'Shea, Thomas J.; Hayman, David T. S.; Wood, James L. N.; Cunningham, Andrew A.; Gilbert, Amy T.; Mills, James N.; Webb, Colleen T.
Title: Network analysis of host–virus communities in bats and rodents reveals determinants of cross-species transmission Document date: 2015_8_24
ID: yqc8r3ll_21
Snippet: As an alternative to using modularity to assign nodes to communities, we also used clique percolation theory (Palla et al. 2005) . In this method, nodes can belong to multiple communities. See Supporting Information for more details. ‡Quantitative connectance, which takes into account edge weights. §Quantitative connectance, with weights adjusted according to sampling intensity. ¶Quantitative connectance, where the weights are the proportion .....
Document: As an alternative to using modularity to assign nodes to communities, we also used clique percolation theory (Palla et al. 2005) . In this method, nodes can belong to multiple communities. See Supporting Information for more details. ‡Quantitative connectance, which takes into account edge weights. §Quantitative connectance, with weights adjusted according to sampling intensity. ¶Quantitative connectance, where the weights are the proportion of viruses shared rather than the absolute number (see Methods).
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