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The ground truth about metadata and community detection in networks

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TLDR
It is proved that no algorithm can uniquely solve community detection, and a general No Free Lunch theorem for community detection is proved, which implies that there can be no algorithm that is optimal for all possible community detection tasks.
Abstract
Across many scientific domains, there is a common need to automatically extract a simplified view or coarse-graining of how a complex system's components interact. This general task is called community detection in networks and is analogous to searching for clusters in independent vector data. It is common to evaluate the performance of community detection algorithms by their ability to find so-called ground truth communities. This works well in synthetic networks with planted communities because these networks' links are formed explicitly based on those known communities. However, there are no planted communities in real-world networks. Instead, it is standard practice to treat some observed discrete-valued node attributes, or metadata, as ground truth. We show that metadata are not the same as ground truth and that treating them as such induces severe theoretical and practical problems. We prove that no algorithm can uniquely solve community detection, and we prove a general No Free Lunch theorem for community detection, which implies that there can be no algorithm that is optimal for all possible community detection tasks. However, community detection remains a powerful tool and node metadata still have value, so a careful exploration of their relationship with network structure can yield insights of genuine worth. We illustrate this point by introducing two statistical techniques that can quantify the relationship between metadata and community structure for a broad class of models. We demonstrate these techniques using both synthetic and real-world networks, and for multiple types of metadata and community structures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity of meso-scale architecture in human and non-human connectomes

TL;DR: It is reported that non-assortative communities are better able to capture the functional connectivity for some networks and offer measures of community diversity that predict cognitive performance.
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The many facets of community detection in complex networks.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a focused review of the different motivations that underpin community detection, highlighting the different facets of community detection and highlighting the many lines of research and points out open directions and avenues for future research.
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Multiresolution Consensus Clustering in Networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method for identifying community structure at different scales based on multiresolution modularity and consensus clustering, which can be applied to the output of any clustering algorithm.
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Disaster early warning and damage assessment analysis using social media data and geo-location information

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the severity of damage in one area is positively correlated with the intensity of disaster-related activity, and the coastal areas and areas with close proximity to Hurricane center tend to suffer from higher losses during a disaster.
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Tracking community evolution in social networks: A survey

TL;DR: A classification of various methods for tracking community evolution in dynamic social networks into four main approaches using as a criterion the functioning principle is proposed, based on independent successive static detection and matching.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Community structure in social and biological networks

TL;DR: This article proposes a method for detecting communities, built around the idea of using centrality indices to find community boundaries, and tests it on computer-generated and real-world graphs whose community structure is already known and finds that the method detects this known structure with high sensitivity and reliability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Normalized cuts and image segmentation

TL;DR: This work treats image segmentation as a graph partitioning problem and proposes a novel global criterion, the normalized cut, for segmenting the graph, which measures both the total dissimilarity between the different groups as well as the total similarity within the groups.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Normalized cuts and image segmentation

TL;DR: This work treats image segmentation as a graph partitioning problem and proposes a novel global criterion, the normalized cut, for segmenting the graph, which measures both the total dissimilarity between the different groups as well as the total similarity within the groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community detection in graphs

TL;DR: A thorough exposition of community structure, or clustering, is attempted, from the definition of the main elements of the problem, to the presentation of most methods developed, with a special focus on techniques designed by statistical physicists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community detection in graphs

TL;DR: A thorough exposition of the main elements of the clustering problem can be found in this paper, with a special focus on techniques designed by statistical physicists, from the discussion of crucial issues like the significance of clustering and how methods should be tested and compared against each other, to the description of applications to real networks.
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