학술논문

Deep Community Detection
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing IEEE Trans. Signal Process. Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on. 63(21):5706-5719 Nov, 2015
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Communities
Image edge detection
Laplace equations
Upper bound
Noise
Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions
Noise measurement
Graph connectivity
local Fiedler vector centrality
node and edge centrality
noisy graphs
removal strategy
spectral graph theory
social networks
submodularity
Language
ISSN
1053-587X
1941-0476
Abstract
A deep community in a graph is a connected component that can only be seen after removal of nodes or edges from the rest of the graph. This paper formulates the problem of detecting deep communities as multi-stage node removal that maximizes a new centrality measure, called the local Fiedler vector centrality (LFVC), at each stage. The LFVC is associated with the sensitivity of algebraic connectivity to node or edge removals. We prove that a greedy node/edge removal strategy, based on successive maximization of LFVC, has bounded performance loss relative to the optimal, but intractable, combinatorial batch removal strategy. Under a stochastic block model framework, we show that the greedy LFVC strategy can extract deep communities with probability one as the number of observations becomes large. We apply the greedy LFVC strategy to real-world social network datasets. Compared with conventional community detection methods we demonstrate improved ability to identify important communities and key members in the network.