English

Funnelling effect in networks

Physics and Society 2015-05-13 v1

Abstract

Funnelling effect, in the context of searching on networks, precisely indicates that the search takes place through a few specific nodes. We define the funnelling capacity ff of a node as the fraction of successful dynamic paths through it with a fixed target. The distribution D(f)D(f) of the fraction of nodes with funnelling capacity ff shows a power law behaviour in random networks (with power law or stretched exponential degree distribution) for a considerable range of values of the parameters defining the networks. Specifically we study in detail D1=D(f=1)D_1=D(f=1), which is the quantity signifying the presence of nodes through which all the dynamical paths pass through. In scale free networks with degree distribution P(k)kγP(k) \propto k^{-\gamma}, D1D_1 increases linearly with γ\gamma initially and then attains a constant value. It shows a power law behaviour, D1NρD_1 \propto N^{-\rho}, with the number of nodes NN where ρ\rho is weakly dependent on γ\gamma for γ>2.2\gamma > 2.2. The latter variation is also independent of the number of searches. On stretched exponential networks with P(k)exp(kδ)P(k) \propto \exp{(-k^\delta)}, ρ\rho is strongly dependent on δ\delta. The funnelling distribution for a model social network, where the question of funnelling is most relevant, is also investigated.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0903.4072,
  title  = {Funnelling effect in networks},
  author = {Parongama Sen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.4072},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Talk given in Complex2009, Shanghai; some results reported earlier in arXiv:0801.0370

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:43:46.865Z