DocumentCode :
3703993
Title :
Identifying Diffusion Sources in Large Networks: A Community Structure Based Approach
Author :
Jiaojiao Jiang;Andi Zhou;Kasra Majbouri Yazdi;Sheng Wen;Shui Yu;Yang Xiang
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Inf. Technol., Deakin Univ., Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Volume :
1
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
302
Lastpage :
309
Abstract :
The global diffusion of epidemics, rumors and computer viruses causes great damage to our society. It is critical to identify the diffusion sources and promptly quarantine them. However, most methods proposed so far are unsuitable for large networks because of their computational cost and the complex spatiotemporal diffusion processes. In this paper, we develop a community structure based approach to efficiently identify diffusion sources in large networks. We first detect the community structure of a network and assign sensors on community bridge nodes to record diffusion dynamics. From the infection time of bridge sensors, we can determine the very first infected community from which the diffusion started and spread out to other communities. This, therefore, overcomes the scalability issue in source identification problems by narrowing the set of suspects down to the first infected community. Then, to accurately locate the diffusion source from suspects, we utilize an intrinsic feature of diffusion sources that the relative infection time of any node is linear with its effective distance from the diffusion source. Thus, for each suspect, we compute the correlation coefficient to measure the degree of linear dependence between sensors´ relative infection times and their effective distances from the suspect, and consider the one with the greatest correlation coefficient as the source. We evaluate our approach in two large networks containing more than 300,000 nodes, which are collected from Twitter. The experiment results show that our method can identify diffusion sources with very high degree of accuracy. Especially when the average community size shrinks, the accuracy of our approach increases dramatically.
Keywords :
"Bridges","Scalability","Diffusion processes","Correlation","Computational complexity","Monte Carlo methods","Joining processes"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Trustcom/BigDataSE/ISPA, 2015 IEEE
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/Trustcom.2015.388
Filename :
7345296
Link To Document :
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