Affiliation:
1. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Abstract
While most network embedding techniques model the proximity between nodes in a network, recently there has been significant interest in
structural embeddings
that are based on node
equivalences
, a notion rooted in sociology: equivalences or positions are collections of nodes that have similar roles—i.e., similar functions, ties or interactions with nodes in other positions—irrespective of their distance or reachability in the network. Unlike the proximity-based methods that are rigorously evaluated in the literature, the evaluation of structural embeddings is less mature. It relies on small synthetic or real networks with labels that are not perfectly defined, and its connection to sociological equivalences has hitherto been vague and tenuous. With new node embedding methods being developed at a breakneck pace,
proper evaluation, and systematic characterization of existing approaches will be essential to progress.
To fill in this gap, we set out to understand
what
types of equivalences structural embeddings capture. We are the first to contribute rigorous intrinsic and extrinsic evaluation methodology for structural embeddings, along with carefully-designed, diverse datasets of varying sizes. We observe a number of different evaluation variables that can lead to different results (e.g., choice of similarity measure, classifier, and label definitions). We find that degree distributions within nodes’ local neighborhoods can lead to simple yet effective baselines in their own right and guide the future development of structural embedding. We hope that our findings can influence the design of further node embedding methods and also pave the way for more comprehensive and fair evaluation of structural embedding methods.
Funder
NSF
Army Young Investigator Award
Adobe Digital Experience
Amazon, Facebook and Google
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Reference68 articles.
1. Amir Bakarov. 2018. A survey of word embeddings evaluation methods. arXiv:1801.09536. Retrieved from http://arxiv.org/abs/1801.09536.
2. Notions of position in social network analysis;Borgatti Stephen;Sociological Methodology,1992
3. Two algorithms for computing regular equivalence
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