7,502 research outputs found
Characterizing the community structure of complex networks
Community structure is one of the key properties of complex networks and
plays a crucial role in their topology and function. While an impressive amount
of work has been done on the issue of community detection, very little
attention has been so far devoted to the investigation of communities in real
networks. We present a systematic empirical analysis of the statistical
properties of communities in large information, communication, technological,
biological, and social networks. We find that the mesoscopic organization of
networks of the same category is remarkably similar. This is reflected in
several characteristics of community structure, which can be used as
``fingerprints'' of specific network categories. While community size
distributions are always broad, certain categories of networks consist mainly
of tree-like communities, while others have denser modules. Average path
lengths within communities initially grow logarithmically with community size,
but the growth saturates or slows down for communities larger than a
characteristic size. This behaviour is related to the presence of hubs within
communities, whose roles differ across categories. Also the community
embeddedness of nodes, measured in terms of the fraction of links within their
communities, has a characteristic distribution for each category. Our findings
are verified by the use of two fundamentally different community detection
methods.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figures, 4 table
Robust Temporally Coherent Laplacian Protrusion Segmentation of 3D Articulated Bodies
In motion analysis and understanding it is important to be able to fit a
suitable model or structure to the temporal series of observed data, in order
to describe motion patterns in a compact way, and to discriminate between them.
In an unsupervised context, i.e., no prior model of the moving object(s) is
available, such a structure has to be learned from the data in a bottom-up
fashion. In recent times, volumetric approaches in which the motion is captured
from a number of cameras and a voxel-set representation of the body is built
from the camera views, have gained ground due to attractive features such as
inherent view-invariance and robustness to occlusions. Automatic, unsupervised
segmentation of moving bodies along entire sequences, in a temporally-coherent
and robust way, has the potential to provide a means of constructing a
bottom-up model of the moving body, and track motion cues that may be later
exploited for motion classification. Spectral methods such as locally linear
embedding (LLE) can be useful in this context, as they preserve "protrusions",
i.e., high-curvature regions of the 3D volume, of articulated shapes, while
improving their separation in a lower dimensional space, making them in this
way easier to cluster. In this paper we therefore propose a spectral approach
to unsupervised and temporally-coherent body-protrusion segmentation along time
sequences. Volumetric shapes are clustered in an embedding space, clusters are
propagated in time to ensure coherence, and merged or split to accommodate
changes in the body's topology. Experiments on both synthetic and real
sequences of dense voxel-set data are shown. This supports the ability of the
proposed method to cluster body-parts consistently over time in a totally
unsupervised fashion, its robustness to sampling density and shape quality, and
its potential for bottom-up model constructionComment: 31 pages, 26 figure
Overlapping Community Discovery Methods: A Survey
The detection of overlapping communities is a challenging problem which is
gaining increasing interest in recent years because of the natural attitude of
individuals, observed in real-world networks, to participate in multiple groups
at the same time. This review gives a description of the main proposals in the
field. Besides the methods designed for static networks, some new approaches
that deal with the detection of overlapping communities in networks that change
over time, are described. Methods are classified with respect to the underlying
principles guiding them to obtain a network division in groups sharing part of
their nodes. For each of them we also report, when available, computational
complexity and web site address from which it is possible to download the
software implementing the method.Comment: 20 pages, Book Chapter, appears as Social networks: Analysis and Case
Studies, A. Gunduz-Oguducu and A. S. Etaner-Uyar eds, Lecture Notes in Social
Networks, pp. 105-125, Springer,201
A link density clustering algorithm based on automatically selecting density peaks for overlapping community detection
Peer reviewedPostprin
Principal Patterns on Graphs: Discovering Coherent Structures in Datasets
Graphs are now ubiquitous in almost every field of research. Recently, new
research areas devoted to the analysis of graphs and data associated to their
vertices have emerged. Focusing on dynamical processes, we propose a fast,
robust and scalable framework for retrieving and analyzing recurring patterns
of activity on graphs. Our method relies on a novel type of multilayer graph
that encodes the spreading or propagation of events between successive time
steps. We demonstrate the versatility of our method by applying it on three
different real-world examples. Firstly, we study how rumor spreads on a social
network. Secondly, we reveal congestion patterns of pedestrians in a train
station. Finally, we show how patterns of audio playlists can be used in a
recommender system. In each example, relevant information previously hidden in
the data is extracted in a very efficient manner, emphasizing the scalability
of our method. With a parallel implementation scaling linearly with the size of
the dataset, our framework easily handles millions of nodes on a single
commodity server
- …