Nearest-neighbor Queries in Probabilistic Graphs
Data(s) |
20/10/2011
20/10/2011
14/07/2009
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Resumo |
Large probabilistic graphs arise in various domains spanning from social networks to biological and communication networks. An important query in these graphs is the k nearest-neighbor query, which involves finding and reporting the k closest nodes to a specific node. This query assumes the existence of a measure of the "proximity" or the "distance" between any two nodes in the graph. To that end, we propose various novel distance functions that extend well known notions of classical graph theory, such as shortest paths and random walks. We argue that many meaningful distance functions are computationally intractable to compute exactly. Thus, in order to process nearest-neighbor queries, we resort to Monte Carlo sampling and exploit novel graph-transformation ideas and pruning opportunities. In our extensive experimental analysis, we explore the trade-offs of our approximation algorithms and demonstrate that they scale well on real-world probabilistic graphs with tens of millions of edges. |
Identificador |
Potamias, Michalis; Bonchi, Francesco; Gionis, Aristides; Kollios, George. "Nearest-neighbor Queries in Probabilistic Graphs", Technical Report BUCS-TR-2009-024, Computer Science Department, Boston University, July 14, 2009. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1748] |
Idioma(s) |
en_US |
Publicador |
Boston University Computer Science Department |
Relação |
BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-2009-024 |
Tipo |
Technical Report |