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A subset selection based approach to structural reducibility of complex networks

Richa Tripathi and Amit Reza

Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 2020, vol. 540, issue C

Abstract: Most of the real world networks such as the internet network, collaboration networks, brain networks, citation networks, powerline and airline networks are very large and to study their structure and dynamics one often requires working with large connectivity (adjacency) matrices. However, it is almost always true that a few or sometimes most of the nodes and their connections are not very crucial for network functioning or that the network is robust to a failure of certain nodes and their connections to the rest of the network. In the present work, we aim to extract the size reduced representation of complex networks such that new representation has the most relevant network nodes and connections and retains its spectral properties. To achieve this, we use the Subset Selection (SS) procedure. The SS method, in general, is used to retrieve maximum information (based on Frobenius norm) from a matrix in terms of its most informative columns. The retrieved matrix, typically known as subset has columns of an original matrix that have the least linear dependency. We present the application of SS procedure to many adjacency matrices of real-world networks and model network types to extract their subset. The subset owing to its small size can play a crucial role in analyzing spectral properties of large complex networks where space and time complexity of analyzing full adjacency matrices are too expensive. The adjacency matrix constructed from the obtained subset has a smaller size and represents the most important network structure. We observed that the subset network which is almost half the size of the original network has better information flow efficiency than the original network. Also, we found that the contribution to the Inverse Participation ratio of the network comes almost entirely from nodes that are there in the subset. This implies that the SS procedure can extract the top most influential nodes without the need for analyzing the full adjacency matrix.

Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:phsmap:v:540:y:2020:i:c:s0378437119318060

DOI: 10.1016/j.physa.2019.123214

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