Latent Space Model for Higher-order Networks and Generalized Tensor Decomposition
This work addresses the challenge of analyzing higher-order networks in fields like social science or biology, but it is incremental as it builds on existing latent space models with a generalized tensor decomposition approach.
The paper tackles the problem of modeling complex higher-order network interactions among multiple entities by introducing a unified latent space framework, achieving accurate link prediction and interpretable parameter estimations on real-world datasets.
We introduce a unified framework, formulated as general latent space models, to study complex higher-order network interactions among multiple entities. Our framework covers several popular models in recent network analysis literature, including mixture multi-layer latent space model and hypergraph latent space model. We formulate the relationship between the latent positions and the observed data via a generalized multilinear kernel as the link function. While our model enjoys decent generality, its maximum likelihood parameter estimation is also convenient via a generalized tensor decomposition procedure.We propose a novel algorithm using projected gradient descent on Grassmannians. We also develop original theoretical guarantees for our algorithm. First, we show its linear convergence under mild conditions. Second, we establish finite-sample statistical error rates of latent position estimation, determined by the signal strength, degrees of freedom and the smoothness of link function, for both general and specific latent space models. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method on synthetic data. We also showcase the merit of our method on two real-world datasets that are conventionally described by different specific models in producing meaningful and interpretable parameter estimations and accurate link prediction. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method on synthetic data. We also showcase the merit of our method on two real-world datasets that are conventionally described by different specific models in producing meaningful and interpretable parameter estimations and accurate link prediction.