Limei Hu

h-index3
2papers

2 Papers

6.6LGMay 26
DDGAD: Trajectory Dynamics for Diffusion-Based Graph Anomaly Detection

Yuxin Yang, Limei Hu, Feng Chen

Graph anomaly detection (GAD) aims to identify nodes or substructures whose behavior or attributes deviate significantly from the overall pattern in graph-structured data, with critical applications in financial risk control, social network analysis, and cybersecurity. However, existing GCN-based methods suffer from the fundamental problem of contamination propagation, where anomalous nodes pollute the representations of their neighbors through message passing, leading to degraded detection performance. In this paper, we propose DDGAD, a novel diffusion-based graph anomaly detection framework that leverages trajectory dynamics to distinguish normal and anomalous nodes. Our key insight is that normal nodes exhibit consistent and stable representation trajectories under the coupled effects of diffusion regularization and reliability-aware neighborhood consensus, while anomalous nodes exhibit unstable and conflicting dynamics due to the directional disagreement between the global manifold prior and locally contaminated message passing. To mitigate contamination propagation, we introduce a distributed reliability-aware consensus refinement mechanism and define three complementary anomaly signals: neighbor inconsistency, reliability weight, and dynamical conflict energy. We further provide a preliminary theoretical analysis on normal node stability under the coupled dynamics. These signals collectively characterize anomalous behaviors from the perspectives of local inconsistency, consensus reliability, and dynamical instability. Extensive experiments on five real-world datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework.

DCJul 30, 2025
Low-Communication Resilient Distributed Estimation Algorithm Based on Memory Mechanism

Wei Li, Limei Hu, Feng Chen et al.

In multi-task adversarial networks, the accurate estimation of unknown parameters in a distributed algorithm is hindered by attacked nodes or links. To tackle this challenge, this brief proposes a low-communication resilient distributed estimation algorithm. First, a node selection strategy based on reputation is introduced that allows nodes to communicate with more reliable subset of neighbors. Subsequently, to discern trustworthy intermediate estimates, the Weighted Support Vector Data Description (W-SVDD) model is employed to train the memory data. This trained model contributes to reinforce the resilience of the distributed estimation process against the impact of attacked nodes or links. Additionally, an event-triggered mechanism is introduced to minimize ineffective updates to the W-SVDD model, and a suitable threshold is derived based on assumptions. The convergence of the algorithm is analyzed. Finally, simulation results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm achieves superior performance with less communication cost compared to other algorithms.