Auburn business professor says don’t just quarantine yourself, quarantine the virus

Article body

Amid the global outbreak of COVID-19, Brian Connelly, professor of management and the Luck Eminent Scholar in Auburn University’s Harbert College of Business, offers his thoughts on social distancing.

Connelly has studied networks of people (such as groups in a workplace) and companies (such as interconnected boards, known as the interlocking directorate). His research, and that of his management and sociology colleagues, has uncovered insights about diffusion (or, in the case of a virus, contagion) throughout a social network that are informative to the predicament we all face with COVID-19.

How effective is social distancing?

Many of us have seen the pithy video circulating on social media of a string of matches. The end match is lit and, one by one, all the matches in the row are subsequently lit, right up until one match is removed from the string, which stops the chain reaction. The implication, in this perilous time of COVID-19 transmission, is that social distancing can stop the spread of the disease.

While the message of the video is correct and well meaning, it actually underestimates the critical role of social distancing. To understand what the video gets wrong, it is important to grasp one of the basic principles of social networks: network topology. Specifically, when we get a close look at the map of people and connections, which researchers call the “topology” of the network, we see that social distancing can, potentially, have massively disruptive effects on contagion.

What makes social distancing so important to reducing contagion?

The key is in understanding how we are all connected to one another. Some might think the topology of social networks is uniformly distributed, so that it looks like a grid, much like the streets of Tulsa, Oklahoma. A few thoroughfares might be bigger than others, but it’s pretty much a straight line to travel anywhere in the network to anywhere else in the network. This is the view of the matchbook video, where social distance and connections exist in a straight line.

Others might envision a social network as a randomly distributed hodgepodge of connections, much like the city streets of Boston. Like a lot of social networks, the streets evolved over time, and as a result the connections are confusing and rarely travel in a straight line. To get from one side of the network to the other typically requires many turns in a circuitous route.

Neither of these perspectives accurately depict social networks. D.J. Watts of the University of Pennsylvania is a pioneering researcher that describes the social networks we form as “Small Worlds.” By this, he means that the topology of our social interactions is not uniform, like Tulsa, or random, like Boston, but rather it is a lot of densely connected people that are only loosely connected to one another. In other words, we have lots of little social networks with people that are closely connected to each other (for example, family, co-workers, the bridge club) but these social clusters are generally not well connected to each other.

What makes Small Worlds important?

It means that social distancing can be hugely effective, if we engage in the right kind of social distancing. The key is to avoid connecting disconnected clusters of people. Ron Burt of the University of Chicago describes what he calls “Structural Holes,” which are big gaps between clusters of people in a social network. Those that fill a structural hole are the most important people in the network because they are the glue that holds the whole network together. We all have the potential for filling a structural hole. For instance, every time we get our haircut, we bridge the gap between our family members and those that work at the salon. See the graphic, Social Distancing: Eliminate the Structural Hole.

What does this mean for the spread of COVID-19?

It means there are things we can do to make our social distancing especially effective in reducing contagion of the disease. Many of us are trying to isolate ourselves as much as possible, and in the process are making decisions about those with whom we will interact. As we do so, it is imperative to think about whether you are filling a structural hole.

Consider this in practical terms. I am working from home, where I share living quarters with my wife and two of my daughters. We invite my mother-in-law into our home. The five of us form a densely connected social cluster. Imagine, now, if I meet with one of my doctoral students. This is just one additional social connection. However, our connection bridges a structural hole, which potentially could allow contagion to jump from one cluster in the network to another. Meeting with a doctoral student fills a structural hole, which is exactly what we must avoid doing.

Anything else we should know about social networks?

In fact, there is a related principle that could be very important to contagion. It is hidden in what Stephen Borgatti of the University of Kentucky calls “Network Closeness,” which is a term that describes the shortest path to traverse the entirety of a social network. In other words, how many jumps does it take for anything (like a virus) to skip all the way from one side of a network to the other? Structural holes make it super easy to make these jumps.

This is why contagion happens so quickly, because social networks have lots of structural holes, so things like viruses can jump quickly from cluster to cluster in the network. On the flip side, it is also the key to reducing contagion. By eliminating any structural hole connection, we make it difficult for the virus to jump between social clusters and slow the speed of contagion.

Final thoughts?

In simple terms, think of it this way: Don’t just quarantine yourself, quarantine the virus. By carefully choosing our social contacts, and ensuring we are not connecting disparate groups in our network, we isolate the virus to specific clusters. We make it difficult for the virus to jump from one cluster to another. Small Worlds, Structural Holes, Network Closeness … it all sounds very technical, but it boils down to this: Social distancing can reduce contagion far more than you may even realize.

About Brian Connelly:

Brian Connelly is a professor of management and the Luck Eminent Scholar in Auburn University’s Harbert College of Business. He is editor-elect of the Journal of Management and has published in journals such as the Strategic Management Journal, Organization Science, Global Strategy Journal, Strategic Organization and the Journal of Management Studies. His work is often cited in media outlets, such as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and USA Today.

More Information Support the Harbert College of Business

Auburn University is a nationally ranked land grant institution recognized for its commitment to world-class scholarship, interdisciplinary research with an elite, top-tier Carnegie R1 classification, life-changing outreach with Carnegie’s Community Engagement designation and an undergraduate education experience second to none. Auburn is home to more than 30,000 students, and its faculty and research partners collaborate to develop and deliver meaningful scholarship, science and technology-based advancements that meet pressing regional, national and global needs. Auburn’s commitment to active student engagement, professional success and public/private partnership drives a growing reputation for outreach and extension that delivers broad economic, health and societal impact.