6 research outputs found
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Analyzing, Mining, and Predicting Networked Behaviors
Network structure exists in various types of data in the real world, such as online and offline social networks, traffic networks, computer networks, brain networks, and countless other cases where there are relationships between different entities in the data. What are the roles of network structures in these data? First, the network captures inherent characteristics of the data themselves. This is clear from the definition of the network, which represents the relationship between entities: e.g., the social links among people in a social network describe how they interact with each other; a road network summarizes how the roads are laid out geographically; a brain network obtained from fMRI images represents pairs of brain regions that are active at the same time; a computer network constrains the paths via which internet packages and thus information or viruses can spread. Second, the network structures affect the evolution of the data over time. For example, new friendship links in an online social network are frequently created between friends of friends. Similarly, the current road network structure is without a doubt taken into consideration when roads are added or temporarily closed. As we grow, our brains also grow, including the additions of useful links or the clean up of unnecessary links between brain regions. Third, the network structures act as guidance for many different processes happening in the data. For instance, the links between users on social network dictate how gossips can spread; the roads influence how traffic flows in a city; the links between brain regions affects the way we think and how effectively we do things; the connections between computers route the transfer of any information on the internet.In this thesis, I studied the network effect in various networked behaviors, including analyzing such effect, finding its patterns, and predicting future networked behaviors. First, I gained insights into the data by analyzing the accompanied network structures as well as its evolution. Second, I proposed algorithms for mining different network patterns that help summarize the effect of the network structures on different networked behaviors. Finally, I proposed models to predict the evolution of networked behaviors over time. Toward these tasks, I explored a wide variety of network data, including protein-protein interaction networks, online social networks, collaboration networks, chemical compounds, and traffic networks. Overall, I tackled these network data in different aspects and developed a number of methods for effectively mining and forecasting networked behaviors in data
EUSN 2021 Book of Abstracts, Fifth European Conference on Social Networks
Book of abstract of the fifth European conference on Social Networks EUSN 202
Topology Reconstruction of Dynamical Networks via Constrained Lyapunov Equations
The network structure (or topology) of a dynamical network is often
unavailable or uncertain. Hence, we consider the problem of network
reconstruction. Network reconstruction aims at inferring the topology of a
dynamical network using measurements obtained from the network. In this
technical note we define the notion of solvability of the network
reconstruction problem. Subsequently, we provide necessary and sufficient
conditions under which the network reconstruction problem is solvable. Finally,
using constrained Lyapunov equations, we establish novel network reconstruction
algorithms, applicable to general dynamical networks. We also provide
specialized algorithms for specific network dynamics, such as the well-known
consensus and adjacency dynamics.Comment: 8 page
Recent Advances in Social Data and Artificial Intelligence 2019
The importance and usefulness of subjects and topics involving social data and artificial intelligence are becoming widely recognized. This book contains invited review, expository, and original research articles dealing with, and presenting state-of-the-art accounts pf, the recent advances in the subjects of social data and artificial intelligence, and potentially their links to Cyberspace