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Random hypergraphs and their applications

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abstract

In the last few years we have witnessed the emergence, primarily in on-line communities, of new types of social networks that require for their representation more complex graph structures than have been employed in the past. One example is the folksonomy, a tripartite structure of users, resources, and tags -- labels collaboratively applied by the users to the resources in order to impart meaningful structure on an otherwise undifferentiated database. Here we propose a mathematical model of such tripartite structures which represents them as random hypergraphs. We show that it is possible to calculate many properties of this model exactly in the limit of large network size and we compare the results against observations of a real folksonomy, that of the on-line photography web site Flickr. We show that in some cases the model matches the properties of the observed network well, while in others there are significant differences, which we find to be attributable to the practice of multiple tagging, i.e., the application by a single user of many tags to one resource, or one tag to many resources.

fields

cs.DS 1

years

2025 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Compressing Hypergraphs using Suffix Sorting

cs.DS · 2025-06-05 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

HyperCSA compresses real-world hypergraphs to 26-79% of original size using suffix sorting, scales to larger data than prior methods, and runs neighbor queries 6-40 times faster.

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  • Compressing Hypergraphs using Suffix Sorting cs.DS · 2025-06-05 · unverdicted · none · ref 7 · internal anchor

    HyperCSA compresses real-world hypergraphs to 26-79% of original size using suffix sorting, scales to larger data than prior methods, and runs neighbor queries 6-40 times faster.