Title :
Detecting and Tracking Community Dynamics in Evolutionary Networks
Author :
Chen, Zhengzhang ; Wilson, Kevin A. ; Jin, Ye ; Hendrix, William ; Samatova, Nagiza F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC, USA
Abstract :
Community structure or clustering is ubiquitous in many evolutionary networks including social networks, biological networks and financial market networks. Detecting and tracking community deviations in evolutionary networks can uncover important and interesting behaviors that are latent if we ignore the dynamic information. In biological networks, for example, a small variation in a gene community may indicate an event, such as gene fusion, gene fission, or gene decay. In contrast to the previous work on detecting communities in static graphs or tracking conserved communities in time-varying graphs, this paper first introduces the concept of community dynamics, and then shows that the baseline approach by enumerating all communities in each graph and comparing all pairs of communities between consecutive graphs is infeasible and impractical. We propose an efficient method for detecting and tracking community dynamics in evolutionary networks by introducing graph representatives and community representatives to avoid generating redundant communities and limit the search space. We measure the performance of the representative-based algorithm by comparison to the baseline algorithm on synthetic networks, and our experiments show that our algorithm achieves a runtime speedup of 11-46. The method has also been applied to two real-world evolutionary networks including Food Web and Enron Email. Significant and informative community dynamics have been detected in both cases.
Keywords :
evolutionary computation; graph theory; pattern clustering; search problems; social networking (online); ubiquitous computing; baseline approach; biological networks; community clustering; community detection; community dynamics tracking; community structure; consecutive graphs; evolutionary networks; financial market networks; gene community; graph representatives; social networks; synthetic networks; ubiquitous computing; community detection; community dynamics; evolutionary analysis; social networks;
Conference_Titel :
Data Mining Workshops (ICDMW), 2010 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9244-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-4257-7
DOI :
10.1109/ICDMW.2010.32