6 result(s)
Page Size: 10, 20, 50
Export: bibtex, xml, json, csv
Order by:

CNR Author operator: and / or
more
Typology operator: and / or
Language operator: and / or
Date operator: and / or
more
Rights operator: and / or
2013 Conference article Unknown
On multidimensional network measures
Magnani M., Monreale A., Rossetti G., Giannotti F.
Networks, i.e., sets of interconnected entities, are ubiquitous, spanning disciplines as diverse as sociology, biology and computer sci- ence. The recent availability of large amounts of network data has thus provided a unique opportunity to develop models and analysis tools ap- plicable to a wide range of scenarios. However, real-world phenomena are often more complex than existing graph data models. One relevant ex- ample concerns the numerous types of social relationships (or edges) that can be present between individuals in a social network. In this short pa- per we present a uni ed model and a set of measures recently developed to represent and analyze network data with multiple types of edges.Source: SEDB 2013 - 21st Italian Symposium on Advanced Database Systems, pp. 215–222, Roccella Jonica, Reggio Calabria, Italy, 30 June - 3 July 2013

See at: CNR ExploRA


2013 Report Restricted
"You Know Because I Know": a multidimensional network approach to human resources problem
Coscia M., Rossetti G., Pennacchioli D., Ceccarelli D., Giannotti F.
Finding talents, often among the people already hired, is an endemic challenge for organizations. The social networking revolution, with online tools like Linkedin, made possible to make explicit and accessible what we perceived, but not used, for thousands of years: the exact position and ranking of a person in a network of professional and personal connections. To search and mine where and how an employee is positioned on a global skill network will enable organizations to find unpredictable sources of knowledge, innovation and know-how. This data richness and hidden knowledge demands for a multidimensional and multiskill approach to the network ranking problem. Multidimensional networks are networks with multiple kinds of relations. To the best of our knowledge, no network-based ranking algorithm is able to handle multidimensional networks and multiple rankings over multiple attributes at the same time. In this paper we propose such an algorithm, whose aim is to address the node multi-ranking problem in multidimensional networks. We test our algorithm over several real world networks, extracted from DBLP and the Enron email corpus, and we show its usefulness in providing less trivial and more flexible rankings than the current state of the art algorithms.Source: ISTI Technical reports, 2013
Project(s): DATA SIM via OpenAIRE

See at: arxiv.org Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2013 Conference article Open Access OPEN
The three dimensions of social prominence
Pennacchioli D., Rossetti G., Pappalardo L., Pedreschi D., Giannotti F., Coscia M.
One classic problem denition in social network analysis is the study of diusion in networks, which enables us to tackle problems like favoring the adoption of positive technologies. Most of the attention has been turned to how to maximize the number of in uenced nodes, but this approach misses the fact that dierent scenarios imply dierent dif- fusion dynamics, only slightly related to maximizing the number of nodes involved. In this paper we measure three dierent dimensions of social prominence: the Width, i.e. the ratio of neighbors in uenced by a node; the Depth, i.e. the degrees of separation from a node to the nodes perceiv- ing its prominence; and the Strength, i.e. the intensity of the prominence of a node. By dening a procedure to extract prominent users in complex networks, we detect associations between the three dimensions of social prominence and classical network statistics. We validate our results on a social network extracted from the Last.Fm music platform.Source: SocInfo2013 - Social Informatics. 5th International Conference, pp. 319–332, Kyoto, Japan, 25-27 November 2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-03260-3_28
Project(s): DATA SIM via OpenAIRE
Metrics:


See at: www.michelecoscia.com Open Access | doi.org Restricted | link.springer.com Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2013 Conference article Open Access OPEN
"You know because I know": a multidimensional network approach to human resources problem
Coscia M., Rossetti G., Pennachioli D., Ceccarelli D., Giannotti F.
Finding talents, often among the people already hired, is an endemic challenge for organizations. The social networking revolution, with online tools like Linkedin, made possible to make explicit and accessible what we perceived, but not used, for thousands of years: the exact position and ranking of a person in a network of professional and personal connections. To search and mine where and how an employee is positioned on a global skill network will enable organizations to find unpredictable sources of knowledge, innovation and know- how. This data richness and hidden knowledge demands for a multidimensional and multiskill approach to the network ranking problem. Multidimensional networks are networks with multiple kinds of relations. To the best of our knowledge, no network-based ranking algorithm is able to handle multidimensional networks and multiple rankings over multiple attributes at the same time. In this paper we propose such an algorithm, whose aim is to address the node multi-ranking problem in multidimensional networks. We test our algorithm over several real world networks, extracted from DBLP and the Enron email corpus, and we show its usefulness in providing less trivial and more flexible rankings than the current state of the art algorithms.Source: ASONAM - 2013 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining, pp. 434–441, Niagara Falls, Canada, 25-28 August 2013
DOI: 10.1145/2492517.2492537
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1305.7146
Project(s): DATA SIM via OpenAIRE
Metrics:


See at: arXiv.org e-Print Archive Open Access | dl.acm.org Restricted | doi.org Restricted | doi.org Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2013 Conference article Unknown
Measuring tie strength in multidimensional networks
Rossetti G., Pappalardo L., Pedreschi D.
Online social networks have allowed us to build massive net- works of weak ties: acquaintances and nonintimate ties we use all the time to spread information and thoughts. Conversely, strong ties are people we really trust, persons most like us and whose social circles tightly overlap with our own. Unfortunately, social media do not incorporate tie strength in the creation and management of relationships, and treat all users the same: friend or stranger, with little or nothing in between. In the current work, we address the challenging issue of detecting on online social networks the strong and intimate ties from the huge mass of such mere social contacts. In order to do so, we propose a novel multidimensional definition of tie strength which exploits the existence of multiple online social links between two individuals. We test our definition on a multidimensional network constructed over users in Foursquare, Twitter and Facebook, analyzing the structural role of strong e weak links, and the correlations with the most common similarity measures.Source: SEBD 2013 - 21st Italian Symposium on Advanced Database Systems, pp. 223–230, Rocella Jonica, Italy, June 30 - July 03 2013
Project(s): DATA SIM via OpenAIRE

See at: CNR ExploRA


2013 Conference article Restricted
Quantification trees
Milli L., Monreale A., Rossetti G., Giannotti F., Pedreschi D., Sebastiani F.
In many applications there is a need to monitor how a population is distributed across different classes, and to track the changes in this distribution that derive from varying circumstances; an example such application is monitoring the percentage (or "prevalence") of unemployed people in a given region, or in a given age range, or at different time periods. When the membership of an individual in a class cannot be established deterministically, this monitoring activity requires classification. However, in the above applications the final goal is not determining which class each individual belongs to, but simply estimating the prevalence of each class in the unlabeled data. This task is called quantification. In a supervised learning framework we may estimate the distribution across the classes in a test set from a training set of labeled individuals. However, this may be suboptimal, since the distribution in the test set may be substantially different from that in the training set (a phenomenon called distribution drift). So far, quantification has mostly been addressed by learning a classifier optimized for individual classification and later adjusting the distribution it computes to compensate for its tendency to either under- or over-estimate the prevalence of the class. In this paper we propose instead to use a type of decision trees (quantification trees) optimized not for individual classification, but directly for quantification. Our experiments show that quantification trees are more accurate than existing state-of-the-art quantification methods, while retaining at the same time the simplicity and understandability of the decision tree framework.Source: ICDM 2013 - 13th IEEE International Conference on Data Mining, pp. 528–536, Dallas, US, 7-12 December 2013
DOI: 10.1109/icdm.2013.122
Metrics:


See at: xplorestaging.ieee.org Restricted | CNR ExploRA