Cost-effective outbreak detection in networks
Jure Leskovec,Andreas Krause,Carlos Guestrin,Christos Faloutsos,Jeanne M. VanBriesen,Natalie S. Glance +5 more
- 12 Aug 2007
- pp 420-429
TL;DR: This work exploits submodularity to develop an efficient algorithm that scales to large problems, achieving near optimal placements, while being 700 times faster than a simple greedy algorithm and achieving speedups and savings in storage of several orders of magnitude.
read more
Abstract: Given a water distribution network, where should we place sensors toquickly detect contaminants? Or, which blogs should we read to avoid missing important stories?.These seemingly different problems share common structure: Outbreak detection can be modeled as selecting nodes (sensor locations, blogs) in a network, in order to detect the spreading of a virus or information asquickly as possible. We present a general methodology for near optimal sensor placement in these and related problems. We demonstrate that many realistic outbreak detection objectives (e.g., detection likelihood, population affected) exhibit the property of "submodularity". We exploit submodularity to develop an efficient algorithm that scales to large problems, achieving near optimal placements, while being 700 times faster than a simple greedy algorithm. We also derive online bounds on the quality of the placements obtained by any algorithm. Our algorithms and bounds also handle cases where nodes (sensor locations, blogs) have different costs.We evaluate our approach on several large real-world problems,including a model of a water distribution network from the EPA, andreal blog data. The obtained sensor placements are provably near optimal, providing a constant fraction of the optimal solution. We show that the approach scales, achieving speedups and savings in storage of several orders of magnitude. We also show how the approach leads to deeper insights in both applications, answering multicriteria trade-off, cost-sensitivity and generalization questions.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Time Constrained Influence Maximization in Social Networks
Bo Liu,Gao Cong,Dong Xu,Yifeng Zeng +3 more
- 10 Dec 2012
TL;DR: It is shown that the problem is NP-hard, and the monotonicity and submodularity of the time constrained influence spread function is proved, and a greedy algorithm with performance guarantees is developed.
200
Submodular Salient Region Detection
Zhuolin Jiang,Larry S. Davis +1 more
- 23 Jun 2013
TL;DR: Experimental results demonstrate that the approach outperforms several recently proposed saliency detection approaches and can be employed by exploiting the sub modularity properties of the objective function.
Online Processing Algorithms for Influence Maximization
Jing Tang,Xueyan Tang,Xiaokui Xiao,Junsong Yuan +3 more
- 27 May 2018
TL;DR: This paper proposes a new algorithm for OPIM with both superior empirical effectiveness and strong theoretical guarantees, and demonstrates that its solutions outperform the state of the art for both OPIM and conventional influence maximization.
197
•Posted Content
Using a Model of Social Dynamics to Predict Popularity of News
Kristina Lerman,Tad Hogg +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a stochastic models of user behavior on social news portal Digg were used to predict the popularity of new content based on early user reactions to new content.
•Posted Content
Adaptive Submodularity: Theory and Applications in Active Learning and Stochastic Optimization
Daniel Golovin,Andreas Krause +1 more
TL;DR: It is proved that if a problem satisfies adaptive submodularity, a simple adaptive greedy algorithm is guaranteed to be competitive with the optimal policy, providing performance guarantees for both stochastic maximization and coverage.
References
Diffusion of innovations
TL;DR: Upon returning to the U.S., author Singhal’s Google search revealed the following: in January 2001, the impeachment trial against President Estrada was halted by senators who supported him and the government fell without a shot being fired.
40.5K
Maximizing the spread of influence through a social network
David Kempe,Jon Kleinberg,Éva Tardos +2 more
- 24 Aug 2003
TL;DR: An analysis framework based on submodular functions shows that a natural greedy strategy obtains a solution that is provably within 63% of optimal for several classes of models, and suggests a general approach for reasoning about the performance guarantees of algorithms for these types of influence problems in social networks.
A Theory of Fads, Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that localized conformity of behavior and the fragility of mass behaviors can be explained by informational cascades, where an individual, having observed the actions of those ahead of him, to follow the behavior of the preceding individual without regard to his own information.
•Posted Content
A Theory of Fads, Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades
TL;DR: It is argued that localized conformity of behavior and the fragility of mass behaviors can be explained by informational cascades.
5.8K
An analysis of approximations for maximizing submodular set functions--I
TL;DR: It is shown that a “greedy” heuristic always produces a solution whose value is at least 1 −[(K − 1/K]K times the optimal value, which can be achieved for eachK and has a limiting value of (e − 1)/e, where e is the base of the natural logarithm.
5.2K
Related Papers (5)
David Kempe,Jon Kleinberg,Éva Tardos +2 more
- 24 Aug 2003
Wei Chen,Yajun Wang,Siyu Yang +2 more
- 28 Jun 2009
Pedro Domingos,Matthew Richardson +1 more
- 26 Aug 2001