15 research outputs found

    Graph diffusions and matrix functions: fast algorithms and localization results

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    Network analysis provides tools for addressing fundamental applications in graphs such as webpage ranking, protein-function prediction, and product categorization and recommendation. As real-world networks grow to have millions of nodes and billions of edges, the scalability of network analysis algorithms becomes increasingly important. Whereas many standard graph algorithms rely on matrix-vector operations that require exploring the entire graph, this thesis is concerned with graph algorithms that are local (that explore only the graph region near the nodes of interest) as well as the localized behavior of global algorithms. We prove that two well-studied matrix functions for graph analysis, PageRank and the matrix exponential, stay localized on networks that have a skewed degree sequence related to the power-law degree distribution common to many real-world networks. Our results give the first theoretical explanation of a localization phenomenon that has long been observed in real-world networks. We prove our novel method for the matrix exponential converges in sublinear work on graphs with the specified degree sequence, and we adapt our method to produce the first deterministic algorithm for computing the related heat kernel diffusion in constant-time. Finally, we generalize this framework to compute any graph diffusion in constant time

    Volume 73, Number 04 (April 1955)

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    Music Festivals Abroad this Summer Soloist with Toscanini (interview with Herva Nelli) Beethoven of Bonn Xaver Scharwenka—A Great Artist and Teacher Two Centuries of Trombones Music in the Little Red Schoolhouse Birthday Bells for Bell Kayser Studies: An Analysis of the Second Twelvehttps://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/etude/1092/thumbnail.jp

    A practical fpt algorithm for Flow Decomposition and transcript assembly

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    The Flow Decomposition problem, which asks for the smallest set of weighted paths that "covers" a flow on a DAG, has recently been used as an important computational step in transcript assembly. We prove the problem is in FPT when parameterized by the number of paths by giving a practical linear fpt algorithm. Further, we implement and engineer a Flow Decomposition solver based on this algorithm, and evaluate its performance on RNA-sequence data. Crucially, our solver finds exact solutions while achieving runtimes competitive with a state-of-the-art heuristic. Finally, we contextualize our design choices with two hardness results related to preprocessing and weight recovery. Specifically, kk-Flow Decomposition does not admit polynomial kernels under standard complexity assumptions, and the related problem of assigning (known) weights to a given set of paths is NP-hard.Comment: Introduces software package Toboggan: Version 1.0. http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.82163
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