Direction Matters: On Influence-Preserving Graph Summarization and Max-cut Principle for Directed Graphs

W Xu, G Niu, A Hyvärinen, M Sugiyama - arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.09588, 2019 - arxiv.org
arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.09588, 2019arxiv.org
Summarizing large-scaled directed graphs into small-scale representations is a useful but
less studied problem setting. Conventional clustering approaches, which based on" Min-
Cut"-style criteria, compress both the vertices and edges of the graph into the communities,
that lead to a loss of directed edge information. On the other hand, compressing the vertices
while preserving the directed edge information provides a way to learn the small-scale
representation of a directed graph. The reconstruction error, which measures the edge …
Summarizing large-scaled directed graphs into small-scale representations is a useful but less studied problem setting. Conventional clustering approaches, which based on "Min-Cut"-style criteria, compress both the vertices and edges of the graph into the communities, that lead to a loss of directed edge information. On the other hand, compressing the vertices while preserving the directed edge information provides a way to learn the small-scale representation of a directed graph. The reconstruction error, which measures the edge information preserved by the summarized graph, can be used to learn such representation. Compared to the original graphs, the summarized graphs are easier to analyze and are capable of extracting group-level features which is useful for efficient interventions of population behavior. In this paper, we present a model, based on minimizing reconstruction error with non-negative constraints, which relates to a "Max-Cut" criterion that simultaneously identifies the compressed nodes and the directed compressed relations between these nodes. A multiplicative update algorithm with column-wise normalization is proposed. We further provide theoretical results on the identifiability of the model and on the convergence of the proposed algorithms. Experiments are conducted to demonstrate the accuracy and robustness of the proposed method.
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