Back to Search
Start Over
Finding One Community in a Sparse Graph
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- arXiv, 2015.
-
Abstract
- We consider a random sparse graph with bounded average degree, in which a subset of vertices has higher connectivity than the background. In particular, the average degree inside this subset of vertices is larger than outside (but still bounded). Given a realization of such graph, we aim at identifying the hidden subset of vertices. This can be regarded as a model for the problem of finding a tightly knitted community in a social network, or a cluster in a relational dataset. In this paper we present two sets of contributions: $(i)$ We use the cavity method from spin glass theory to derive an exact phase diagram for the reconstruction problem. In particular, as the difference in edge probability increases, the problem undergoes two phase transitions, a static phase transition and a dynamic one. $(ii)$ We establish rigorous bounds on the dynamic phase transition and prove that, above a certain threshold, a local algorithm (belief propagation) correctly identify most of the hidden set. Below the same threshold \emph{no local algorithm} can achieve this goal. However, in this regime the subset can be identified by exhaustive search. For small hidden sets and large average degree, the phase transition for local algorithms takes an intriguingly simple form. Local algorithms succeed with high probability for ${\rm deg}_{\rm in} - {\rm deg}_{\rm out} > \sqrt{{\rm deg}_{\rm out}/e}$ and fail for ${\rm deg}_{\rm in} - {\rm deg}_{\rm out} < \sqrt{{\rm deg}_{\rm out}/e}$ (with ${\rm deg}_{\rm in}$, ${\rm deg}_{\rm out}$ the average degrees inside and outside the community). We argue that spectral algorithms are also ineffective in the latter regime. It is an open problem whether any polynomial time algorithms might succeed for ${\rm deg}_{\rm in} - {\rm deg}_{\rm out} < \sqrt{{\rm deg}_{\rm out}/e}$.<br />30 pages, 8 pdf figures
- Subjects :
- Random graph
Physics
Social and Information Networks (cs.SI)
FOS: Computer and information sciences
Cavity method
Dense graph
Spin glass
Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)
Open problem
FOS: Physical sciences
Statistical and Nonlinear Physics
Computer Science - Social and Information Networks
Machine Learning (stat.ML)
Belief propagation
Combinatorics
Statistics - Machine Learning
Bounded function
Time complexity
Mathematical Physics
Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....89f9350b478a73a3bdebc62276f7bb20
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1502.05680