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arxiv: 1410.6572 · v3 · pith:52PEY5Q5new · submitted 2014-10-24 · 💻 cs.DM · cond-mat.dis-nn· cs.SI· math.CO· physics.soc-ph

Detection of Core-Periphery Structure in Networks Using Spectral Methods and Geodesic Paths

classification 💻 cs.DM cond-mat.dis-nncs.SImath.COphysics.soc-ph
keywords verticescorenetworksperipheralstructuremethodsvertexcore--periphery
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We introduce several novel and computationally efficient methods for detecting "core--periphery structure" in networks. Core--periphery structure is a type of mesoscale structure that includes densely-connected core vertices and sparsely-connected peripheral vertices. Core vertices tend to be well-connected both among themselves and to peripheral vertices, which tend not to be well-connected to other vertices. Our first method, which is based on transportation in networks, aggregates information from many geodesic paths in a network and yields a score for each vertex that reflects the likelihood that a vertex is a core vertex. Our second method is based on a low-rank approximation of a network's adjacency matrix, which can often be expressed as a tensor-product matrix. Our third approach uses the bottom eigenvector of the random-walk Laplacian to infer a coreness score and a classification into core and peripheral vertices. We also design an objective function to (1) help classify vertices into core or peripheral vertices and (2) provide a goodness-of-fit criterion for classifications into core versus peripheral vertices. To examine the performance of our methods, we apply our algorithms to both synthetically-generated networks and a variety of networks constructed from real-world data sets.

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