Network Classification and Categorization
Social and Information Networks
2017-09-15 v1 Digital Libraries
Machine Learning
Abstract
To the best of our knowledge, this paper presents the first large-scale study that tests whether network categories (e.g., social networks vs. web graphs) are distinguishable from one another (using both categories of real-world networks and synthetic graphs). A classification accuracy of was achieved using a random forest classifier with both real and synthetic networks. This work makes two important findings. First, real-world networks from various domains have distinct structural properties that allow us to predict with high accuracy the category of an arbitrary network. Second, classifying synthetic networks is trivial as our models can easily distinguish between synthetic graphs and the real-world networks they are supposed to model.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1709.04481,
title = {Network Classification and Categorization},
author = {James P. Canning and Emma E. Ingram and Sammantha Nowak-Wolff and Adriana M. Ortiz and Nesreen K. Ahmed and Ryan A. Rossi and Karl R. B. Schmitt and Sucheta Soundarajan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1709.04481},
year = {2017}
}