Community detection based on first passage probabilities

May 05, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Physics Letters

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Authors Zhaole Wu, Xin Wang, Wenyi Fang, Longzhao Liu, Shaoting Tang, Hongwei Zheng, Zhiming Zheng arXiv ID 2005.01938 Category physics.soc-ph Cross-listed cs.SI Citations 10 Venue Physics Letters Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Community detection is of fundamental significance for understanding the topology characters and the spreading dynamics on complex networks. While random walk is widely used and is proven effective in many community detection algorithms, there still exists two major defects: (i) the maximal length of random walk is too large to distinguish the clustering information if using the average step of all possible random walks; (ii) the useful community information at all other step lengths are missed if using a pre-assigned maximal length. In this paper, we propose a novel community detection method based on the first passage probabilities (FPPM), equipped with a new similarity measure that incorporates the complete structural information within the maximal step length. Here the diameter of the network is chosen as an appropriate boundary of random walks which is adaptive to different networks. Then we use the hierarchical clustering to group the vertices into communities and further select the best division through the corresponding modularity values. Finally, a post-processing strategy is designed to integrate the unreasonable small communities, which significantly improves the accuracy of community division. Surprisingly, the numerical simulations show that FPPM performs best compared to several classic algorithms on both synthetic benchmarks and real-world networks, which reveals the universality and effectiveness of our method.
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