English

"You Know Because I Know": a Multidimensional Network Approach to Human Resources Problem

Social and Information Networks 2013-05-31 v1 Computers and Society Data Structures and Algorithms Physics and Society

Abstract

Finding talents, often among the people already hired, is an endemic challenge for organizations. The social networking revolution, with online tools like Linkedin, made possible to make explicit and accessible what we perceived, but not used, for thousands of years: the exact position and ranking of a person in a network of professional and personal connections. To search and mine where and how an employee is positioned on a global skill network will enable organizations to find unpredictable sources of knowledge, innovation and know-how. This data richness and hidden knowledge demands for a multidimensional and multiskill approach to the network ranking problem. Multidimensional networks are networks with multiple kinds of relations. To the best of our knowledge, no network-based ranking algorithm is able to handle multidimensional networks and multiple rankings over multiple attributes at the same time. In this paper we propose such an algorithm, whose aim is to address the node multi-ranking problem in multidimensional networks. We test our algorithm over several real world networks, extracted from DBLP and the Enron email corpus, and we show its usefulness in providing less trivial and more flexible rankings than the current state of the art algorithms.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1305.7146,
  title  = {"You Know Because I Know": a Multidimensional Network Approach to Human Resources Problem},
  author = {Michele Coscia and Giulio Rossetti and Diego Pennacchioli and Damiano Ceccarelli and Fosca Giannotti},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1305.7146},
  year   = {2013}
}
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