English

Information Source Finding in Networks: Querying with Budgets

Social and Information Networks 2020-10-23 v5

Abstract

In this paper, we study a problem of detecting the source of diffused information by querying individuals, given a sample snapshot of the information diffusion graph, where two queries are asked: {\em (i)} whether the respondent is the source or not, and {\em (ii)} if not, which neighbor spreads the information to the respondent. We consider the case when respondents may not always be truthful and some cost is taken for each query. Our goal is to quantify the necessary and sufficient budgets to achieve the detection probability 1δ1-\delta for any given 0<δ<1.0<\delta<1. To this end, we study two types of algorithms: adaptive and non-adaptive ones, each of which corresponds to whether we adaptively select the next respondents based on the answers of the previous respondents or not. We first provide the information theoretic lower bounds for the necessary budgets in both algorithm types. In terms of the sufficient budgets, we propose two practical estimation algorithms, each of non-adaptive and adaptive types, and for each algorithm, we quantitatively analyze the budget which ensures 1δ1-\delta detection accuracy. This theoretical analysis not only quantifies the budgets needed by practical estimation algorithms achieving a given target detection accuracy in finding the diffusion source, but also enables us to quantitatively characterize the amount of extra budget required in non-adaptive type of estimation, refereed to as {\em adaptivity gap}. We validate our theoretical findings over synthetic and real-world social network topologies.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2009.00795,
  title  = {Information Source Finding in Networks: Querying with Budgets},
  author = {Jaeyoung Choi and Sangwoo Moon and Jiin Woo and Kyunghwan Son and Jinwoo Shin and Yung Yi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2009.00795},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Part of this work was presented at the IEEE INFOCOM 2017 (arXiv:1805.03532) and IEEE ISIT 2018 (arXiv:1711.05496)

R2 v1 2026-06-23T18:15:22.344Z