54,146 research outputs found
Relevance of Negative Links in Graph Partitioning: A Case Study Using Votes From the European Parliament
In this paper, we want to study the informative value of negative links in
signed complex networks. For this purpose, we extract and analyze a collection
of signed networks representing voting sessions of the European Parliament
(EP). We first process some data collected by the VoteWatch Europe Website for
the whole 7 th term (2009-2014), by considering voting similarities between
Members of the EP to define weighted signed links. We then apply a selection of
community detection algorithms, designed to process only positive links, to
these data. We also apply Parallel Iterative Local Search (Parallel ILS), an
algorithm recently proposed to identify balanced partitions in signed networks.
Our results show that, contrary to the conclusions of a previous study focusing
on other data, the partitions detected by ignoring or considering the negative
links are indeed remarkably different for these networks. The relevance of
negative links for graph partitioning therefore is an open question which
should be further explored.Comment: in 2nd European Network Intelligence Conference (ENIC), Sep 2015,
Karlskrona, Swede
Evolutionary Algorithms for Community Detection in Continental-Scale High-Voltage Transmission Grids
Symmetry is a key concept in the study of power systems, not only because the admittance and Jacobian matrices used in power flow analysis are symmetrical, but because some previous studies have shown that in some real-world power grids there are complex symmetries. In order to investigate the topological characteristics of power grids, this paper proposes the use of evolutionary algorithms for community detection using modularity density measures on networks representing supergrids in order to discover densely connected structures. Two evolutionary approaches (generational genetic algorithm, GGA+, and modularity and improved genetic algorithm, MIGA) were applied. The results obtained in two large networks representing supergrids (European grid and North American grid) provide insights on both the structure of the supergrid and the topological differences between different regions. Numerical and graphical results show how these evolutionary approaches clearly outperform to the well-known Louvain modularity method. In particular, the average value of modularity obtained by GGA+ in the European grid was 0.815, while an average of 0.827 was reached in the North American grid. These results outperform those obtained by MIGA and Louvain methods (0.801 and 0.766 in the European grid and 0.813 and 0.798 in the North American grid, respectively)
"Going back to our roots": second generation biocomputing
Researchers in the field of biocomputing have, for many years, successfully
"harvested and exploited" the natural world for inspiration in developing
systems that are robust, adaptable and capable of generating novel and even
"creative" solutions to human-defined problems. However, in this position paper
we argue that the time has now come for a reassessment of how we exploit
biology to generate new computational systems. Previous solutions (the "first
generation" of biocomputing techniques), whilst reasonably effective, are crude
analogues of actual biological systems. We believe that a new, inherently
inter-disciplinary approach is needed for the development of the emerging
"second generation" of bio-inspired methods. This new modus operandi will
require much closer interaction between the engineering and life sciences
communities, as well as a bidirectional flow of concepts, applications and
expertise. We support our argument by examining, in this new light, three
existing areas of biocomputing (genetic programming, artificial immune systems
and evolvable hardware), as well as an emerging area (natural genetic
engineering) which may provide useful pointers as to the way forward.Comment: Submitted to the International Journal of Unconventional Computin
Recent Advances in Graph Partitioning
We survey recent trends in practical algorithms for balanced graph
partitioning together with applications and future research directions
Revisiting Interval Graphs for Network Science
The vertices of an interval graph represent intervals over a real line where
overlapping intervals denote that their corresponding vertices are adjacent.
This implies that the vertices are measurable by a metric and there exists a
linear structure in the system. The generalization is an embedding of a graph
onto a multi-dimensional Euclidean space and it was used by scientists to study
the multi-relational complexity of ecology. However the research went out of
fashion in the 1980s and was not revisited when Network Science recently
expressed interests with multi-relational networks known as multiplexes. This
paper studies interval graphs from the perspective of Network Science
A maximal clique based multiobjective evolutionary algorithm for overlapping community detection
Detecting community structure has become one im-portant technique for studying complex networks. Although many community detection algorithms have been proposed, most of them focus on separated communities, where each node can be-long to only one community. However, in many real-world net-works, communities are often overlapped with each other. De-veloping overlapping community detection algorithms thus be-comes necessary. Along this avenue, this paper proposes a maxi-mal clique based multiobjective evolutionary algorithm for over-lapping community detection. In this algorithm, a new represen-tation scheme based on the introduced maximal-clique graph is presented. Since the maximal-clique graph is defined by using a set of maximal cliques of original graph as nodes and two maximal cliques are allowed to share the same nodes of the original graph, overlap is an intrinsic property of the maximal-clique graph. Attributing to this property, the new representation scheme al-lows multiobjective evolutionary algorithms to handle the over-lapping community detection problem in a way similar to that of the separated community detection, such that the optimization problems are simplified. As a result, the proposed algorithm could detect overlapping community structure with higher partition accuracy and lower computational cost when compared with the existing ones. The experiments on both synthetic and real-world networks validate the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed algorithm
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