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Gergő Tóth

Researcher at University College Dublin

Publications -  9
Citations -  121

Gergő Tóth is an academic researcher from University College Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Triadic closure & Homophily. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 50 citations. Previous affiliations of Gergő Tóth include Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

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Inequality is rising where social network segregation interacts with urban topology.

TL;DR: It is found that the fragmentation of social networks is significantly higher in towns in which residential neighborhoods are divided by physical barriers such as rivers and railroads, and the geographic features of a place can compound economic inequalities via social networks.
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Inter-firm inventor mobility and the role of co-inventor networks in producing high-impact innovation

TL;DR: In this paper, a weighted and time-decayed co-inventor network from all IT-related patents in the harmonized OECD PATSTAT 1977-2010 database is constructed and analyzed for the future impact of firm innovation and isolate the effect of mobile inventors' network characteristics from the characteristics of the collaboration network in the receiving firm.
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No Country for Asylum Seekers? How Short-Term Exposure to Refugees Influences Attitudes and Voting Behavior in Hungary

TL;DR: The authors found that exposure to refugees during the 2015 refugee crisis predicts anti-refugee voting and sentiment in Hungary, and that the far-right opposition gained votes in these settlements in subsequent parliamentary elections.
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Inequality is rising where social network segregation interacts with urban topology.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed an online social network and found that the fragmentation of social networks is significantly higher in towns in which residential neighborhoods are divided by physical barriers such as rivers and railroads.
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Brokering the core and the periphery: Creative success and collaboration networks in the film industry.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that creators in the network core can increase the probability of their creative success by brokering peripheral collaborators to the core, and evidence that being in the core and at the same time bridging between thecore and the periphery of the network significantly increases the likelihood of award winning.