The Intrinsic Scale of Networks is Small
Magdon-Ismail, Malik, Hegde, Kshiteesh
We define the intrinsic scale at which a network begins to reveal its identity as the scale at which subgraphs in the network (created by a random walk) are distinguishable from similar sized subgraphs in a perturbed copy of the network. We conduct an extensive study of intrinsic scale for several networks, ranging from structured (e.g. road networks) to ad-hoc and unstructured (e.g. crowd sourced information networks), to biological. We find: (a) The intrinsic scale is surprisingly small (7-20 vertices), even though the networks are many orders of magnitude larger. (b) The intrinsic scale quantifies ``structure'' in a network -- networks which are explicitly constructed for specific tasks have smaller intrinsic scale. (c) The structure at different scales can be fragile (easy to disrupt) or robust.
Jan-14-2019
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.68)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.68)
- Industry:
- Government (0.68)
- Information Technology > Services (0.69)
- Technology: