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Theories for influencer identification in complex networks
In social and biological systems, the structural heterogeneity of interaction
networks gives rise to the emergence of a small set of influential nodes, or
influencers, in a series of dynamical processes. Although much smaller than the
entire network, these influencers were observed to be able to shape the
collective dynamics of large populations in different contexts. As such, the
successful identification of influencers should have profound implications in
various real-world spreading dynamics such as viral marketing, epidemic
outbreaks and cascading failure. In this chapter, we first summarize the
centrality-based approach in finding single influencers in complex networks,
and then discuss the more complicated problem of locating multiple influencers
from a collective point of view. Progress rooted in collective influence
theory, belief-propagation and computer science will be presented. Finally, we
present some applications of influencer identification in diverse real-world
systems, including online social platforms, scientific publication, brain
networks and socioeconomic systems.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
Stability of Influence Maximization
The present article serves as an erratum to our paper of the same title,
which was presented and published in the KDD 2014 conference. In that article,
we claimed falsely that the objective function defined in Section 1.4 is
non-monotone submodular. We are deeply indebted to Debmalya Mandal, Jean
Pouget-Abadie and Yaron Singer for bringing to our attention a counter-example
to that claim.
Subsequent to becoming aware of the counter-example, we have shown that the
objective function is in fact NP-hard to approximate to within a factor of
for any .
In an attempt to fix the record, the present article combines the problem
motivation, models, and experimental results sections from the original
incorrect article with the new hardness result. We would like readers to only
cite and use this version (which will remain an unpublished note) instead of
the incorrect conference version.Comment: Erratum of Paper "Stability of Influence Maximization" which was
presented and published in the KDD1
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