2,299 research outputs found

    A note on certain ergodicity coefficients

    Full text link
    We investigate two ergodicity coefficients ϕ\phi_{\|\, \|} and τn1\tau_{n-1}, originally introduced to bound the subdominant eigenvalues of nonnegative matrices. The former has been generalized to complex matrices in recent years and several properties for such generalized version have been shown so far. We provide a further result concerning the limit of its powers. Then we propose a generalization of the second coefficient τn1\tau_{n-1} and we show that, under mild conditions, it can be used to recast the eigenvector problem Ax=xAx=x as a particular M-matrix linear system, whose coefficient matrix can be defined in terms of the entries of AA. Such property turns out to generalize the two known equivalent formulations of the Pagerank centrality of a graph

    A nodal domain theorem and a higher-order Cheeger inequality for the graph pp-Laplacian

    Get PDF
    We consider the nonlinear graph pp-Laplacian and its set of eigenvalues and associated eigenfunctions of this operator defined by a variational principle. We prove a nodal domain theorem for the graph pp-Laplacian for any p1p\geq 1. While for p>1p>1 the bounds on the number of weak and strong nodal domains are the same as for the linear graph Laplacian (p=2p=2), the behavior changes for p=1p=1. We show that the bounds are tight for p1p\geq 1 as the bounds are attained by the eigenfunctions of the graph pp-Laplacian on two graphs. Finally, using the properties of the nodal domains, we prove a higher-order Cheeger inequality for the graph pp-Laplacian for p>1p>1. If the eigenfunction associated to the kk-th variational eigenvalue of the graph pp-Laplacian has exactly kk strong nodal domains, then the higher order Cheeger inequality becomes tight as p1p\rightarrow 1

    An algebraic analysis of the graph modularity

    Full text link
    One of the most relevant tasks in network analysis is the detection of community structures, or clustering. Most popular techniques for community detection are based on the maximization of a quality function called modularity, which in turn is based upon particular quadratic forms associated to a real symmetric modularity matrix MM, defined in terms of the adjacency matrix and a rank one null model matrix. That matrix could be posed inside the set of relevant matrices involved in graph theory, alongside adjacency, incidence and Laplacian matrices. This is the reason we propose a graph analysis based on the algebraic and spectral properties of such matrix. In particular, we propose a nodal domain theorem for the eigenvectors of MM; we point out several relations occurring between graph's communities and nonnegative eigenvalues of MM; and we derive a Cheeger-type inequality for the graph optimal modularity

    Modularity bounds for clusters located by leading eigenvectors of the normalized modularity matrix

    Get PDF
    Nodal theorems for generalized modularity matrices ensure that the cluster located by the positive entries of the leading eigenvector of various modularity matrices induces a connected subgraph. In this paper we obtain lower bounds for the modularity of that set of nodes showing that, under certain conditions, the nodal domains induced by eigenvectors corresponding to highly positive eigenvalues of the normalized modularity matrix have indeed positive modularity, that is they can be recognized as modules inside the network. Moreover we establish Cheeger-type inequalities for the cut-modularity of the graph, providing a theoretical support to the common understanding that highly positive eigenvalues of modularity matrices are related with the possibility of subdividing a network into communities
    corecore