English

Clustering attributed graphs: models, measures and methods

Social and Information Networks 2015-01-09 v1 Physics and Society

Abstract

Clustering a graph, i.e., assigning its nodes to groups, is an important operation whose best known application is the discovery of communities in social networks. Graph clustering and community detection have traditionally focused on graphs without attributes, with the notable exception of edge weights. However, these models only provide a partial representation of real social systems, that are thus often described using node attributes, representing features of the actors, and edge attributes, representing different kinds of relationships among them. We refer to these models as attributed graphs. Consequently, existing graph clustering methods have been recently extended to deal with node and edge attributes. This article is a literature survey on this topic, organizing and presenting recent research results in a uniform way, characterizing the main existing clustering methods and highlighting their conceptual differences. We also cover the important topic of clustering evaluation and identify current open problems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1501.01676,
  title  = {Clustering attributed graphs: models, measures and methods},
  author = {Cecile Bothorel and Juan David Cruz and Matteo Magnani and Barbora Micenkova},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1501.01676},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication, Network Science journal

R2 v1 2026-06-22T07:54:24.796Z