Mercator: uncovering faithful hyperbolic embeddings of complex networks
Antoine Allard; Marián Boguñá; M Ángeles Serrano; Guillermo García-Pérez
Mercator: uncovering faithful hyperbolic embeddings of complex networks
Antoine Allard
Marián Boguñá
M Ángeles Serrano
Guillermo García-Pérez
Institute of Physics Pub.
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042822978
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042822978
Tiivistelmä
We introduce Mercator, a reliable embedding method to map real complex
networks into their hyperbolic latent geometry. The method assumes that
the structure of networks is well described by the popularity × similarity
static geometric network model, which can accommodate arbitrary degree
distributions and reproduces many pivotal properties of real networks,
including self-similarity patterns. The algorithm mixes machine learning
and maximum likelihood (ML) approaches to infer the coordinates of the
nodes in the underlying hyperbolic disk with the best matching between
the observed network topology and the geometric model. In its fast mode,
Mercator uses a model-adjusted machine learning technique performing
dimensional reduction to produce a fast and accurate map, whose quality
already outperforms other embedding algorithms in the literature. In the
refined Mercator mode, the fast mode embedding result is taken as an
initial condition in a ML estimation, which significantly improves the
quality of the final embedding. Apart from its accuracy as an embedding
tool, Mercator has the clear advantage of systematically inferring not
only node orderings, or angular positions, but also the hidden degrees
and global model parameters, and has the ability to embed networks with
arbitrary degree distributions. Overall, our results suggest that mixing
machine learning and ML techniques in a model-dependent framework can
boost the meaningful mapping of complex networks.
networks into their hyperbolic latent geometry. The method assumes that
the structure of networks is well described by the popularity × similarity

static geometric network model, which can accommodate arbitrary degree
distributions and reproduces many pivotal properties of real networks,
including self-similarity patterns. The algorithm mixes machine learning
and maximum likelihood (ML) approaches to infer the coordinates of the
nodes in the underlying hyperbolic disk with the best matching between
the observed network topology and the geometric model. In its fast mode,
Mercator uses a model-adjusted machine learning technique performing
dimensional reduction to produce a fast and accurate map, whose quality
already outperforms other embedding algorithms in the literature. In the
refined Mercator mode, the fast mode embedding result is taken as an
initial condition in a ML estimation, which significantly improves the
quality of the final embedding. Apart from its accuracy as an embedding
tool, Mercator has the clear advantage of systematically inferring not
only node orderings, or angular positions, but also the hidden degrees
and global model parameters, and has the ability to embed networks with
arbitrary degree distributions. Overall, our results suggest that mixing
machine learning and ML techniques in a model-dependent framework can
boost the meaningful mapping of complex networks.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]