Temporal Ordered Clustering in Dynamic Networks: Unsupervised and Semi-supervised Learning Algorithms
This addresses the need for tracking temporal patterns in dynamic networks, such as fake news expansion or information spread, but is incremental as it builds on existing clustering and ordering methods.
The paper tackles the problem of temporal ordered clustering in dynamic networks, where nodes are partitioned into ordered clusters based on arrival times, and proposes unsupervised and semi-supervised algorithms that approximate an optimal integer programming solution, achieving high precision in synthetic and real-world networks.
In temporal ordered clustering, given a single snapshot of a dynamic network in which nodes arrive at distinct time instants, we aim at partitioning its nodes into $K$ ordered clusters $\mathcal{C}_1 \prec \cdots \prec \mathcal{C}_K$ such that for $i<j$, nodes in cluster $\mathcal{C}_i$ arrived before nodes in cluster $\mathcal{C}_j$, with $K$ being a data-driven parameter and not known upfront. Such a problem is of considerable significance in many applications ranging from tracking the expansion of fake news to mapping the spread of information. We first formulate our problem for a general dynamic graph, and propose an integer programming framework that finds the optimal clustering, represented as a strict partial order set, achieving the best precision (i.e., fraction of successfully ordered node pairs) for a fixed density (i.e., fraction of comparable node pairs). We then develop a sequential importance procedure and design unsupervised and semi-supervised algorithms to find temporal ordered clusters that efficiently approximate the optimal solution. To illustrate the techniques, we apply our methods to the vertex copying (duplication-divergence) model which exhibits some edge-case challenges in inferring the clusters as compared to other network models. Finally, we validate the performance of the proposed algorithms on synthetic and real-world networks.