English

Modularity of regular and treelike graphs

Combinatorics 2022-12-22 v3 Statistical Mechanics Social and Information Networks Physics and Society

Abstract

Clustering algorithms for large networks typically use modularity values to test which partitions of the vertex set better represent structure in the data. The modularity of a graph is the maximum modularity of a partition. We consider the modularity of two kinds of graphs. For rr-regular graphs with a given number of vertices, we investigate the minimum possible modularity, the typical modularity, and the maximum possible modularity. In particular, we see that for random cubic graphs the modularity is usually in the interval (0.666,0.804)(0.666, 0.804), and for random rr-regular graphs with large rr it usually is of order 1/r1/\sqrt{r}. These results help to establish baselines for statistical tests on regular graphs. The modularity of cycles and low degree trees is known to be close to 1: we extend these results to `treelike' graphs, where the product of treewidth and maximum degree is much less than the number of edges. This yields for example the (deterministic) lower bound 0.6660.666 mentioned above on the modularity of random cubic graphs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1606.09101,
  title  = {Modularity of regular and treelike graphs},
  author = {Colin McDiarmid and Fiona Skerman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.09101},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

25 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T14:38:25.879Z