Affiliation:
1. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and Millennium Institute for Foundational Research on Data, Santiago, Chile
Abstract
We present the theoretical foundations and first experimental study of a new approach in centrality measures for graph data. The main principle is straightforward: the more relevant subgraphs around a vertex, the more central it is in the network. We formalize the notion of “relevant subgraphs” by choosing a family of subgraphs that, given a graph
G
and a vertex
v
, assigns a subset of connected subgraphs of
G
that contains
v
. Any of such families defines a measure of centrality by counting the number of subgraphs assigned to the vertex, i.e., a vertex will be more important for the network if it belongs to more subgraphs in the family. We show several examples of this approach. In particular, we propose the All-Subgraphs (All-Trees) centrality, a centrality measure that considers every subgraph (tree). We study fundamental properties over families of subgraphs that guarantee desirable properties over the centrality measure. Interestingly, All-Subgraphs and All-Trees satisfy all these properties, showing their robustness as centrality notions. To conclude the theoretical analysis, we study the computational complexity of counting certain families of subgraphs and show a linear time algorithm to compute the All-Subgraphs and All-Trees centrality for graphs with bounded treewidth. Finally, we implemented these algorithms and computed these measures over more than one hundred real-world networks. With this data, we present an empirical comparison between well-known centrality measures and those proposed in this work.
Funder
ANID—Millennium Science Initiative Program
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Cited by
1 articles.
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