DocumentCode
4161
Title
Rooting our Rumor Sources in Online Social Networks: The Value of Diversity From Multiple Observations
Author
Zhaoxu Wang ; Wenxiang Dong ; Wenyi Zhang ; Chee Wei Tan
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electron. Eng. & Inf. Sci., Univ. of Sci. & Technol. of China, Hefei, China
Volume
9
Issue
4
fYear
2015
fDate
Jun-15
Firstpage
663
Lastpage
677
Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of rumor source detection with multiple observations, from a statistical point of view of a spreading over a network, based on the susceptible-infectious model. For tree networks, multiple independent observations can dramatically improve the detection probability. For the case of a single rumor source, we propose a unified inference framework based on the joint rumor centrality, and provide explicit detection performance for degree-regular tree networks. Surprisingly, even with merely two observations, the detection probability at least doubles that of a single observation, and further approaches one, i.e., reliable detection, with increasing degree. This indicates that a richer diversity enhances detectability. Furthermore, we consider the case of multiple connected sources and investigate the effect of diversity. For general graphs, a detection algorithm using a breadth-first search strategy is also proposed and evaluated. Besides rumor source detection, our results can be used in network forensics to combat recurring epidemic-like information spreading such as online anomaly and fraudulent email spams.
Keywords
digital forensics; social networking (online); breadth-first search strategy; degree-regular tree networks; detection algorithm; fraudulent email spams; network forensics; online anomaly; online social networks; recurring epidemic-like information spreading; rumor source detection; susceptible-infectious model; unified inference framework; Detectors; Electronic mail; Hidden Markov models; Joints; Reliability; Signal processing algorithms; Silicon; Graph networks; inference algorithms; maximum likelihood detection; multiple observations; rumor spreading;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Topics in Signal Processing, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1932-4553
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSTSP.2015.2389191
Filename
7001649
Link To Document