Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4946578 | Neural Networks | 2017 | 50 Pages |
Abstract
This work develops a generic framework, called the bag-of-paths (BoP), for link and network data analysis. The central idea is to assign a probability distribution on the set of all paths in a network. More precisely, a Gibbs-Boltzmann distribution is defined over a bag of paths in a network, that is, on a representation that considers all paths independently. We show that, under this distribution, the probability of drawing a path connecting two nodes can easily be computed in closed form by simple matrix inversion. This probability captures a notion of relatedness, or more precisely accessibility, between nodes of the graph: two nodes are considered as highly related when they are connected by many, preferably low-cost, paths. As an application, two families of distances between nodes are derived from the BoP probabilities. Interestingly, the second distance family interpolates between the shortest-path distance and the commute-cost distance. In addition, it extends the Bellman-Ford formula for computing the shortest-path distance in order to integrate sub-optimal paths (exploration) by simply replacing the minimum operator by the soft minimum operator. Experimental results on semi-supervised classification tasks show that both of the new distance families are competitive with other state-of-the-art approaches. In addition to the distance measures studied in this paper, the bag-of-paths framework enables straightforward computation of many other relevant network measures.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Artificial Intelligence
Authors
Kevin Françoisse, Ilkka Kivimäki, Amin Mantrach, Fabrice Rossi, Marco Saerens,