MLJun 15, 2022
Sparse Subspace Clustering in Diverse Multiplex Network ModelMajid Noroozi, Marianna Pensky
The paper considers the DIverse MultiPLEx (DIMPLE) network model, introduced in Pensky and Wang (2021), where all layers of the network have the same collection of nodes and are equipped with the Stochastic Block Models. In addition, all layers can be partitioned into groups with the same community structures, although the layers in the same group may have different matrices of block connection probabilities. The DIMPLE model generalizes a multitude of papers that study multilayer networks with the same community structures in all layers, as well as the Mixture Multilayer Stochastic Block Model (MMLSBM), where the layers in the same group have identical matrices of block connection probabilities. While Pensky and Wang (2021) applied spectral clustering to the proxy of the adjacency tensor, the present paper uses Sparse Subspace Clustering (SSC) for identifying groups of layers with identical community structures. Under mild conditions, the latter leads to the strongly consistent between-layer clustering. In addition, SSC allows to handle much larger networks than methodology of Pensky and Wang (2021), and is perfectly suitable for application of parallel computing.
MLFeb 7, 2020
The Hierarchy of Block ModelsMajid Noroozi, Marianna Pensky
There exist various types of network block models such as the Stochastic Block Model (SBM), the Degree Corrected Block Model (DCBM), and the Popularity Adjusted Block Model (PABM). While this leads to a variety of choices, the block models do not have a nested structure. In addition, there is a substantial jump in the number of parameters from the DCBM to the PABM. The objective of this paper is formulation of a hierarchy of block model which does not rely on arbitrary identifiability conditions. We propose a Nested Block Model (NBM) that treats the SBM, the DCBM and the PABM as its particular cases with specific parameter values, and, in addition, allows a multitude of versions that are more complicated than DCBM but have fewer unknown parameters than the PABM. The latter allows one to carry out clustering and estimation without preliminary testing, to see which block model is really true.
MLOct 3, 2019
Sparse Popularity Adjusted Stochastic Block ModelMajid Noroozi, Marianna Pensky, Ramchandra Rimal
In the present paper we study a sparse stochastic network enabled with a block structure. The popular Stochastic Block Model (SBM) and the Degree Corrected Block Model (DCBM) address sparsity by placing an upper bound on the maximum probability of connections between any pair of nodes. As a result, sparsity describes only the behavior of network as a whole, without distinguishing between the block-dependent sparsity patterns. To the best of our knowledge, the recently introduced Popularity Adjusted Block Model (PABM) is the only block model that allows to introduce a {\it structural sparsity} where some probabilities of connections are identically equal to zero while the rest of them remain above a certain threshold. The latter presents a more nuanced view of the network.