Subgraph-indexed sequential subdivision for continuous subgraph matching on dynamic knowledge graph (Q2228151)

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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7311399
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    Subgraph-indexed sequential subdivision for continuous subgraph matching on dynamic knowledge graph
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7311399

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      Subgraph-indexed sequential subdivision for continuous subgraph matching on dynamic knowledge graph (English)
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      16 February 2021
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      Summary: Continuous subgraph matching problem on dynamic graph has become a popular research topic in the field of graph analysis, which has a wide range of applications including information retrieval and community detection. Specifically, given a query graph \(q\), an initial graph \(G_0\), and a graph update stream \(\triangle G_i\), the problem of continuous subgraph matching is to sequentially conduct all possible isomorphic subgraphs covering \(\triangle G_i\) of \(q\) on \(G_i (= G_0\oplus\triangle G_i)\). Since knowledge graph is a directed labeled multigraph having multiple edges between a pair of vertices, it brings new challenges for the problem focusing on dynamic knowledge graph. One challenge is that the multigraph characteristic of knowledge graph intensifies the complexity of candidate calculation, which is the combination of complex topological and attributed structures. Another challenge is that the isomorphic subgraphs covering a given region are conducted on a huge search space of seed candidates, which causes a lot of time consumption for searching the unpromising candidates. To address these challenges, a method of subgraph-indexed sequential subdivision is proposed to accelerating the continuous subgraph matching on dynamic knowledge graph. Firstly, a flow graph index is proposed to arrange the search space of seed candidates in topological knowledge graph and an adjacent index is designed to accelerate the identification of candidate activation states in attributed knowledge graph. Secondly, the sequential subdivision of flow graph index and the transition state model are employed to incrementally conduct subgraph matching and maintain the regional influence of changed candidates, respectively. Finally, extensive empirical studies on real and synthetic graphs demonstrate that our techniques outperform the state-of-the-art algorithms.
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