|
|
Y. Sun, B. Danila, K. Josić and K. E. Bassler
The community structure of a complex network can be determined by
finding the partitioning of its nodes that maximizes modularity. Many of the
proposed algorithms for doing this work by recursively bisecting the network. We show that this unduely constrains their results, leading to a bias in the size of the communities they find and limiting their effectivness. To solve this problem, we propose adding a step to the existing algorithms
that does not increase the order of their computational complexity. We show that, if this step is combined with a commonly used method, the identified constraint and resulting bias are removed, and its ability to find the optimal partitioning is improved. The effectiveness of this combined algorithm is also demonstrated by
using it on real-world example networks. For a number of these examples, it achieves the best results of any known algorithm.
PDF file |
|
|
______________________________________________________________________________________________
Current Address: Department of Mathematics, PGH Building, University of Houston, Houston, Texas 77204-3008
Phone: (713) 743-3500 - Fax: (713) 743-3505
|
|