Graph Similarity Description: How Are These Graphs Similar?

Corinna Coupette, Jilles Vreeken

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference article in proceedingsScientificpeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

How do social networks differ across platforms? How do information networks change over time? Answering questions like these requires us to compare two or more graphs. This task is commonly treated as a measurement problem, but numerical answers give limited insight. Here, we argue that if the goal is to gain understanding, we should treat graph similarity assessment as a description problem instead. We formalize this problem as a model selection task using the Minimum Description Length principle, capturing the similarity of the input graphs in a common model and the differences between them in transformations to individual models. To discover good models, we propose Momo, which breaks the problem into two parts and introduces efficient algorithms for each. Through an extensive set of experiments on a wide range of synthetic and real-world graphs, we confirm that Momo works well in practice.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationKDD 2021 - Proceedings of the 27th ACM SIGKDD Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
PublisherACM
Pages185-195
Number of pages11
ISBN (Electronic)9781450383325
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Aug 2021
MoE publication typeA4 Conference publication

Keywords

  • graph similarity
  • graph summarization
  • information theory

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