2,697 research outputs found
Updating and downdating techniques for optimizing network communicability
The total communicability of a network (or graph) is defined as the sum of
the entries in the exponential of the adjacency matrix of the network, possibly
normalized by the number of nodes. This quantity offers a good measure of how
easily information spreads across the network, and can be useful in the design
of networks having certain desirable properties. The total communicability can
be computed quickly even for large networks using techniques based on the
Lanczos algorithm.
In this work we introduce some heuristics that can be used to add, delete, or
rewire a limited number of edges in a given sparse network so that the modified
network has a large total communicability. To this end, we introduce new edge
centrality measures which can be used to guide in the selection of edges to be
added or removed.
Moreover, we show experimentally that the total communicability provides an
effective and easily computable measure of how "well-connected" a sparse
network is.Comment: 20 pages, 9 pages Supplementary Materia
Densest Subgraph in Dynamic Graph Streams
In this paper, we consider the problem of approximating the densest subgraph
in the dynamic graph stream model. In this model of computation, the input
graph is defined by an arbitrary sequence of edge insertions and deletions and
the goal is to analyze properties of the resulting graph given memory that is
sub-linear in the size of the stream. We present a single-pass algorithm that
returns a approximation of the maximum density with high
probability; the algorithm uses O(\epsilon^{-2} n \polylog n) space,
processes each stream update in \polylog (n) time, and uses \poly(n)
post-processing time where is the number of nodes. The space used by our
algorithm matches the lower bound of Bahmani et al.~(PVLDB 2012) up to a
poly-logarithmic factor for constant . The best existing results for
this problem were established recently by Bhattacharya et al.~(STOC 2015). They
presented a approximation algorithm using similar space and
another algorithm that both processed each update and maintained a
approximation of the current maximum density in \polylog (n)
time per-update.Comment: To appear in MFCS 201
On the Distributed Complexity of Large-Scale Graph Computations
Motivated by the increasing need to understand the distributed algorithmic
foundations of large-scale graph computations, we study some fundamental graph
problems in a message-passing model for distributed computing where
machines jointly perform computations on graphs with nodes (typically, ). The input graph is assumed to be initially randomly partitioned among
the machines, a common implementation in many real-world systems.
Communication is point-to-point, and the goal is to minimize the number of
communication {\em rounds} of the computation.
Our main contribution is the {\em General Lower Bound Theorem}, a theorem
that can be used to show non-trivial lower bounds on the round complexity of
distributed large-scale data computations. The General Lower Bound Theorem is
established via an information-theoretic approach that relates the round
complexity to the minimal amount of information required by machines to solve
the problem. Our approach is generic and this theorem can be used in a
"cookbook" fashion to show distributed lower bounds in the context of several
problems, including non-graph problems. We present two applications by showing
(almost) tight lower bounds for the round complexity of two fundamental graph
problems, namely {\em PageRank computation} and {\em triangle enumeration}. Our
approach, as demonstrated in the case of PageRank, can yield tight lower bounds
for problems (including, and especially, under a stochastic partition of the
input) where communication complexity techniques are not obvious.
Our approach, as demonstrated in the case of triangle enumeration, can yield
stronger round lower bounds as well as message-round tradeoffs compared to
approaches that use communication complexity techniques
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