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Who spread to whom? Inferring online social networks with user features

Version 2 2024-06-06, 00:30
Version 1 2018-09-07, 10:56
conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 00:30 authored by D Wang, W Zhou, JX Zheng, S Wen, J Zhang, Y Xiang
Network inference has been extensively studied to better understand the information diffusion in online social networks. In this field, state-of- art widely adopted a priori knowledge related to users' infection timestamps. Researchers also assume that the smaller the time difference between two nodes, the higher the likelihood of an edge between the pair of users. However, according to our technical analyses and empirical studies, existing methods have two critical problems 1) alternative spreading paths 2) users' delivery delay, which leads to the inaccuracy of previous methods. In this paper, we developed an innovative method to address the inference inaccuracy caused by the exposed two problems. This method determined the existence of an edge between a pair of users according to part of the users' features. The experiment results suggested that our method achieved around 70% accuracy in inferring network structures while existing methods failed in the same tasks.

History

Pagination

1-6

Location

Kansas City, Mo.

Start date

2018-05-20

End date

2018-05-24

ISSN

1550-3607

eISSN

1938-1883

ISBN-13

9781538631805

Language

eng

Publication classification

E Conference publication, E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2018, IEEE

Editor/Contributor(s)

Unknown

Title of proceedings

2018 ICC: IEEE International Conference on Communications

Event

Communications. IEEE International Conference (2018 : Kansas City, Mo.)

Publisher

IEEE

Place of publication

Piscataway, N.J.