6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bb706

RESEARCH PRODUCT

An Empirical Study of the Relation Between Community Structure and Transitivity

Keziban Gunce OrmanHocine CherifiVincent Labatut

subject

FOS: Computer and information sciencesPhysics - Physics and SocietyProperty (philosophy)FOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)[ INFO.INFO-CV ] Computer Science [cs]/Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [cs.CV]01 natural sciencesComplex NetworksClustering010305 fluids & plasmasEmpirical research0103 physical sciences010306 general physicstransitivityCommunity StructureClustering coefficientMathematicsSocial and Information Networks (cs.SI)Transitive relationCommunity structure[INFO.INFO-CV]Computer Science [cs]/Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [cs.CV]Computer Science - Social and Information NetworksComplex networkDegree distributionZero (linguistics)Mathematical economics

description

One of the most prominent properties in real-world networks is the presence of a community structure, i.e. dense and loosely interconnected groups of nodes called communities. In an attempt to better understand this concept, we study the relationship between the strength of the community structure and the network transitivity (or clustering coefficient). Although intuitively appealing, this analysis was not performed before. We adopt an approach based on random models to empirically study how one property varies depending on the other. It turns out the transitivity increases with the community structure strength, and is also affected by the distribution of the community sizes. Furthermore, increasing the transitivity also results in a stronger community structure. More surprisingly, if a very weak community structure causes almost zero transitivity, the opposite is not true and a network with a close to zero transitivity can still have a clearly defined community structure. Further analytical work is necessary to characterize the exact nature of the identified relationship.

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00717707/document