Triad (sociology)

The study of triads and dyads was pioneered by German sociologist Georg Simmel at the end of the nineteenth century.

Those being that it is compared to the lives of others, how they shape society, and how communication plays a role in different relationships scenarios.

A majority of the population has doubled over the last decade and recently has been proven that the more parents conceive, the better outcome a child will have when relating to other siblings.

Applying the attachment theory created by John Bowlby can help decipher the differences between communication and interactions across the world.

[3] Even though a triad consists of three people, an open form of a relationship can alter because two out of three members in this group can clash.

[3] Structural construction can impose stress and clustering as a sense of bad communication between individuals and their different interactions.

[4] Georg Simmel had studied the means of how interaction including sports can alter or contribute to how a group can communicate.