Content area

Abstract

Issue Title: Special Issues: ECML PKDD 2013 and ECML PKDD 2012

Community discovery in complex networks is the problem of detecting, for each node of the network, its membership to one of more groups of nodes, the communities, that are densely connected, or highly interactive, or, more in general, similar, according to a similarity function. So far, the problem has been widely studied in monodimensional networks, i.e. networks where only one connection between two entities may exist. However, real networks are often multidimensional, i.e., multiple connections between any two nodes may exist, either reflecting different kinds of relationships, or representing different values of the same type of tie. In this context, the problem of community discovery has to be redefined, taking into account multidimensional structure of the graph. We define a new concept of community that groups together nodes sharing memberships to the same monodimensional communities in the different single dimensions. As we show, such communities are meaningful and able to group nodes even if they might not be connected in any of the monodimensional networks. We devise frequent pAttern mining-BAsed Community discoverer in mUltidimensional networkS (ABACUS), an algorithm that is able to extract multidimensional communities based on the extraction of frequent closed itemsets from monodimensional community memberships. Experiments on two different real multidimensional networks confirm the meaningfulness of the introduced concepts, and open the way for a new class of algorithms for community discovery that do not rely on the dense connections among nodes.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
ABACUS: frequent pAttern mining-BAsed Community discovery in mUltidimensional networkS
Author
Berlingerio, Michele; Pinelli, Fabio; Calabrese, Francesco
Pages
294-320
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Nov 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
13845810
e-ISSN
1573756X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1413403287
Copyright
The Author(s) 2013