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Journal article · Preprint article

Constrained information flows in temporal networks reveal intermittent communities

From

Technical University of Denmark1

Umeå University2

Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark3

Cognitive Systems, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark4

Many real-world networks represent dynamic systems with interactions that change over time, often in uncoordinated ways and at irregular intervals. For example, university students connect in intermittent groups that repeatedly form and dissolve based on multiple factors, including their lectures, interests, and friends.

Such dynamic systems can be represented as multilayer networkswhere each layer represents a snapshot of the temporal network. In this representation, it is crucial that the links between layers accurately capture real dependencies between those layers. Often, however, these dependencies are unknown.

Therefore, current methods connect layers based on simplistic assumptions that do not capture node-level layer dependencies. For example, connecting every node to itself in other layers with the same weight can wipe out dependencies between intermittent groups, making it difficult or even impossible to identify them.

In this paper, we present a principled approach to estimating node-level layer dependencies based on the network structure within each layer. We implement our node-level coupling method in the community detection framework Infomap and demonstrate its performance compared to current methods on synthetic and real temporal networks.

We show that our approach more effectively constrains information inside multilayer communities so that Infomap can better recover planted groups in multilayer benchmark networks that represent multiple modeswith different groups and better identify intermittent communities in real temporal contact networks.

These results suggest that node-level layer coupling can improve the modeling of information spreading in temporal networks and better capture intermittent community structure.

Language: English
Year: 2018
Pages: 062312
ISSN: 24700053 and 24700045
Types: Journal article and Preprint article
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.97.062312
ORCIDs: 0000-0003-4704-3609 and Lehmann, Sune

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