Extracting backbones from weighted complex networks with incomplete information (Q304977): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 11:12, 12 July 2024
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English | Extracting backbones from weighted complex networks with incomplete information |
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Extracting backbones from weighted complex networks with incomplete information (English)
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26 August 2016
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Summary: The backbone is the natural abstraction of a complex network, which can help people understand a networked system in a more simplified form. Traditional backbone extraction methods tend to include many outliers into the backbone. What is more, they often suffer from the computational inefficiency -- the exhaustive search of all nodes or edges is often prohibitively expensive. In this paper, we propose a backbone extraction heuristic with incomplete information (BEHwII) to find the backbone in a complex weighted network. First, a strict filtering rule is carefully designed to determine edges to be preserved or discarded. Second, we present a local search model to examine part of edges in an iterative way, which only relies on the local/incomplete knowledge rather than the global view of the network. Experimental results on four real-life networks demonstrate the advantage of BEHwII over the classic disparity filter method by either effectiveness or efficiency validity.
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