English

On $k$-connectivity and minimum vertex degree in random $s$-intersection graphs

Combinatorics 2014-11-19 v2 Discrete Mathematics Social and Information Networks Probability Physics and Society

Abstract

Random ss-intersection graphs have recently received much interest in a wide range of application areas. Broadly speaking, a random ss-intersection graph is constructed by first assigning each vertex a set of items in some random manner, and then putting an undirected edge between all pairs of vertices that share at least ss items (the graph is called a random intersection graph when s=1s=1). A special case of particular interest is a uniform random ss-intersection graph, where each vertex independently selects the same number of items uniformly at random from a common item pool. Another important case is a binomial random ss-intersection graph, where each item from a pool is independently assigned to each vertex with the same probability. Both models have found numerous applications thus far including cryptanalysis, and the modeling of recommender systems, secure sensor networks, online social networks, trust networks and small-world networks (uniform random ss-intersection graphs), as well as clustering analysis, classification, and the design of integrated circuits (binomial random ss-intersection graphs). In this paper, for binomial/uniform random ss-intersection graphs, we present results related to kk-connectivity and minimum vertex degree. Specifically, we derive the asymptotically exact probabilities and zero-one laws for the following three properties: (i) kk-vertex-connectivity, (ii) kk-edge-connectivity and (iii) the property of minimum vertex degree being at least kk.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1409.6021,
  title  = {On $k$-connectivity and minimum vertex degree in random $s$-intersection graphs},
  author = {Jun Zhao and Osman Yağan and Virgil Gligor},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1409.6021},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

This paper appears in ACM-SIAM Meeting on Analytic Algorithmics and Combinatorics (ANALCO) 2015, a conference co-located with ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms (SODA) 2015

R2 v1 2026-06-22T06:01:53.976Z