Identifying influential spreaders in complex networks

By Chris Fariss

Check out this interesting new paper posted at arXiv.org: “Identifying influential spreaders in complex networks” that attempts to model the individuals within a network that spread information the most efficiently.

Here is the abstract:

Networks portray a multitude of interactions through which people meet, ideas are spread, and infectious diseases propagate within a society. Identifying the most efficient “spreaders” in a network is an important step to optimize the use of available resources and ensure the more efficient spread of information. Here we show that, in contrast to common belief, the most influential spreaders in a social network do not correspond to the best connected people or to the most central people (high betweenness centrality). Instead, we find: (i) The most efficient spreaders are those located within the core of the network as identified by the k-shell decomposition analysis. (ii) When multiple spreaders are considered simultaneously, the distance between them becomes the crucial parameter that determines the extend of the spreading. Furthermore, we find that– in the case of infections that do not confer immunity on recovered individuals– the infection persists in the high k-shell layers of the network under conditions where hubs may not be able to preserve the infection. Our analysis provides a plausible route for an optimal design of efficient dissemination strategies.



One response to “Identifying influential spreaders in complex networks

  1. I wish everyone would stop posting interesting articles. I’m too busy as it is.

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