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nature of society can be found respectively in Milgram ( 1967 )and Granovetter
( 1973 ). The scale-free model was introduced first in Barabasi and Albert ( 1999 ).
The analysis of human mobility based on dollar movements can be found in
Brockmann et al. ( 2006 ). In Gonzalez et al. ( 2008 ) are described the mobility
patterns discovered by analyzing a rich mobile phone data set, a work later
extended in Song et al. ( 2010 ). Limits on predictability of human mobility
are presented in Song et al. ( 2009 ), while Karamshuk et al. ( 2011 ) classifies
mobility patterns in temporal, social, and spatial dimensions. Cranshaw et al.
( 2010 ) studies the entropy related to LBSN locations in order to understand how
it affect the underlying social network. Crandall et al. ( 2010 ) analyzed a data set
from Flickr and discovered that even a small number of co-occurrences leads
to high probability of a social tie. Wang et al. ( 2011 ) presents a data mining
approach to the question of to what extent individual mobility patterns shape
and impact the social network. In Cho et al. (2011), authors investigate the
interactions between social network and mobility by analyzing data sets from
location-based social networks and a mobile phone network.
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