network (version 1.13.0)

as.network.matrix: Coercion from Matrices to Network Objects

Description

as.network.matrix attempts to coerce its first argument to an object of class network.

Usage

"as.network"(x, ...) "as.network"(x, matrix.type = NULL, directed = TRUE, hyper = FALSE, loops = FALSE, multiple = FALSE, bipartite = FALSE, ignore.eval = TRUE, names.eval = NULL, na.rm = FALSE, edge.check = FALSE, ...)

Arguments

x
a matrix containing an adjacency structure
matrix.type
one of "adjacency", "edgelist", "incidence", or NULL
directed
logical; should edges be interpreted as directed?
hyper
logical; are hyperedges allowed?
loops
logical; should loops be allowed?
multiple
logical; are multiplex edges allowed?
bipartite
count; should the network be interpreted as bipartite? If present (i.e., non-NULL) it is the count of the number of actors in the bipartite network. In this case, the number of nodes is equal to the number of actors plus the number of events (with all actors preceding all events). The edges are then interpreted as nondirected.
ignore.eval
logical; ignore edge values?
names.eval
optionally, the name of the attribute in which edge values should be stored
na.rm
logical; ignore missing entries when constructing the network?
edge.check
logical; perform consistency checks on new edges?
...
additional arguments

Value

An object of class network

Details

Depending on matrix.type, one of three edgeset constructor methods will be employed to read the input matrix (see edgeset.constructors). If matrix.type==NULL, which.matrix.type will be used to guess the appropriate matrix type. The coercion methods will recognize and attempt to utilize the sna extended matrix attributes where feasible. These are as follows:
  • "n": taken to indicate number of vertices in the network.
  • "bipartite": taken to indicate the network's bipartite attribute, where present.
  • "vnames": taken to contain vertex names, where present.

These attributes are generally used with edgelists, and indeed data in sna edgelist format should be transparently converted in most cases. Where the extended matrix attributes are in conflict with the actual contents of x, results are no guaranteed (but the latter will usually override the former). For an edge list, the number of nodes in a network is determined by the number of unique nodes specified. If there are isolate nodes not in the edge list, the "n" attribute needs to be set. See example below.

References

Butts, C. T. (2008). “network: a Package for Managing Relational Data in R.” Journal of Statistical Software, 24(2). http://www.jstatsoft.org/v24/i02/

See Also

edgeset.constructors, network, which.matrix.type

Examples

Run this code
#Draw a random matrix
m<-matrix(rbinom(25,1,0.5),5)
diag(m)<-0

#Coerce to network form
g<-as.network.matrix(m,matrix.type="adjacency")

# edge list example. Only 4 nodes in the edge list.
m = matrix(c(1,2, 2,3, 3,4), byrow = TRUE, nrow=3)
attr(m, 'n') = 7
as.network(m, matrix.type='edgelist')

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