2024 : 11 : 21
Alireza Abdollahpouri

Alireza Abdollahpouri

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 36132793800
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Engineering
Address: Faculty of Engineering- Department of Computer - Room 219
Phone: -

Research

Title
BridgeRank: A novel fast centrality measure based on local structure of the network
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Complex network Influential nodes Centrality measures SIR model Community detection Viral marketing
Year
2018
Journal PHYSICA A-STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS
DOI
Researchers Chiman Salavati ، Alireza Abdollahpouri ، Zhaleh Manbari

Abstract

Ranking nodes in complex networks have become an important task in many application domains. In a complex network, influential nodes are those that have the most spreading ability. Thus, identifying influential nodes based on their spreading ability is a fundamental task in different applications such as viral marketing. One of the most important centrality measures to ranking nodes is closeness centrality which is efficient but suffers from high computational complexity O(n3). This paper tries to improve closeness centrality by utilizing the local structure of nodes and presents a new ranking algorithm, called BridgeRank centrality. The proposed method computes local centrality value for each node. For this purpose, at first, communities are detected and the relationship between communities is completely ignored. Then, by applying a centrality in each community, only one best critical node from each community is extracted. Finally, the nodes are ranked based on computing the sum of the shortest path length of nodes to obtained critical nodes. We have also modified the proposed method by weighting the original BridgeRank and selecting several nodes from each community based on the density of that community. Our method can find the best nodes with high spread ability and low time complexity, which make it applicable to large-scale networks. To evaluate the performance of the proposed method, we use the SIR diffusion model. Finally, experiments on real and artificial networks show that our method is able to identify influential nodes so efficiently, and achieves better performance compared to other recent methods.