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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Centrality Measures, Upper Bound, and Influence Maximization in Large Scale Directed Social Networks

Sankar K. Pal, +2 more
- 01 Jul 2014 - 
- Vol. 130, Iss: 3, pp 317-342
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TLDR
Two new centrality measures, Diffusion Degree for independent cascade model of information diffusion and Maximum Influence Degree are proposed, which provide the maximum theoretically possible influence Upper Bound for a node.
Abstract
The paper addresses the problem of finding top k influential nodes in large scale directed social networks. We propose two new centrality measures, Diffusion Degree for independent cascade model of information diffusion and Maximum Influence Degree. Unlike other existing centrality measures, diffusion degree considers neighbors' contributions in addition to the degree of a node. The measure also works flawlessly with non uniform propagation probability distributions. On the other hand, Maximum Influence Degree provides the maximum theoretically possible influence Upper Bound for a node. Extensive experiments are performed with five different real life large scale directed social networks. With independent cascade model, we perform experiments for both uniform and non uniform propagation probabilities. We use Diffusion Degree Heuristic DiDH and Maximum Influence Degree Heuristic MIDH, to find the top k influential individuals. k seeds obtained through these for both the setups show superior influence compared to the seeds obtained by high degree heuristics, degree discount heuristics, different variants of set covering greedy algorithms and Prefix excluding Maximum Influence Arborescence PMIA algorithm. The superiority of the proposed method is also found to be statistically significant as per T-test.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, three distinct intuitive notions of centrality are uncovered and existing measures are refined to embody these conceptions, and the implications of these measures for the experimental study of small groups are examined.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This article developed models of collective behavior for situations where actors have two alternatives and the costs and/or benefits of each depend on how many other actors choose which alternative, and the key...
Journal ArticleDOI

Maximizing the Spread of Influence through a Social Network

TL;DR: The problem of finding the most influential nodes in a social network is NP-hard as mentioned in this paper, and the first provable approximation guarantees for efficient algorithms were provided by Domingos et al. using an analysis framework based on submodular functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diameter of the World-Wide Web

TL;DR: The World-Wide Web becomes a large directed graph whose vertices are documents and whose edges are links that point from one document to another, which determines the web's connectivity and consequently how effectively the authors can locate information on it.