@booklet {meeks_more_????,
	title = {More Networks in the Humanities or Did books have DNA?},
	journal = {Digital Humanities Specialist},
	year = {Submitted},
	note = {00000},
	abstract = {Elijah Meeks begins by breaking digital humanities research into three "pillars": text analysis, spatial analysis, and network analysis. Honing in on network analysis, Meeks defines network analysis as "useful for the modeling and analysis of relationships between a wide variety of objects." The most common network layout - force-directed - relies on three factors: the size of the node (which exerts repulsion), the strength of the connection (which draws nodes together), and gravity (which allows these factors to play against each other). The problem with force-directed graphs, Meeks points out, is the random and changing positions of nodes. Meeks argues that devising a more accurate conception of gravity will help to stabilize these visualizations. },
	url = {https://dhs.stanford.edu/visualization/more-networks/},
	author = {Meeks, Elijah}
}
