Fixing two weaknesses of the Spectral Method

Lang, Kevin

Neural Information Processing Systems 

We discuss two intrinsic weaknesses of the spectral graph partitioning method, both of which have practical consequences. The first is that spectral embeddings tend to hide the best cuts from the commonly used hyperplane rounding method. Rather than cleaning up the resulting suboptimal cutswith local search, we recommend the adoption of flow-based rounding. The second weakness is that for many "power law" graphs, the spectral method produces cuts that are highly unbalanced, thus decreasing theusefulness of the method for visualization (see figure 4(b)) or as a basis for divide-and-conquer algorithms. These balance problems, which occur even though the spectral method's quotient-style objective function does encourage balance, can be fixed with a stricter balance constraint thatturns the spectral mathematical program into an SDP that can be solved for million-node graphs by a method of Burer and Monteiro.

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found