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Linking the network centrality measures closeness and degree

Computer Science

Linking the network centrality measures closeness and degree

T. S. Evans and B. Chen

Explore the intriguing relationship between degree and closeness centrality measures in networks, uncovered by authors Tim S. Evans and Bingsheng Chen. Their groundbreaking research reveals a surprising linear connection that could change how we understand individual node significance in networks. Don't miss out on these enlightening findings!... show more
Abstract
Measuring the importance of nodes in a network with a centrality measure is an core task in any network application. There many measures available and it is speculated that many encode similar information. We give an explicit non-linear relationship between two of the most popular measures of node centrality: degree and closeness. Based on a shortest-path tree approximation, we give an analytic derivation that shows the inverse of closeness is linearly dependent on the logarithm of degree. We show that our hypothesis works well for a range of networks produced from stochastic network models and for networks derived from 130 real-world data sets. We connect our results with previous results for other network distance scales such as average distance. Our results imply that measuring closeness is broadly redundant unless our relationship is used to remove the dependence on degree from closeness. The success of our relationship suggests that most networks can be approximated by shortest-path spanning trees which are all statistically similar two or more steps away from their root nodes.
Publisher
Communications Physics
Published On
Jul 02, 2022
Authors
Tim S. Evans, Bingsheng Chen
Tags
network centrality
degree
closeness
non-linear relationship
stochastic models
real-world datasets
shortest-path spanning trees
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