Many techniques in the social sciences and graph theory deal with the problem of examining and analyzing patterns found in the underlying structure and associations of a group of entities. However, much of this work assumes that this underlying structure is known or can easily be inferred from data, which may often be an unrealistic assumption for many real-world problems. Below we consider the problem of learning and querying a graph-based model of this underlying structure. The model is learned from noisy observations linking sets of entities. We explicitly allow different types of links (representing different types of relations) and temporal information indicating when a link was observed. We quantitatively compare this representation and learning method against other algorithms on the task of predicting future links and new "friendships" in a variety of real world data sets.
%0 Journal Article
%1 citeulike:580813
%A Kubica, Jeremy
%A Moore, Andrew
%A Cohn, David
%A Schneider, Jeff
%B Proceedings of the International Conference on Machine Learning ICML'03
%D 2003
%K community
%T Finding Underlying Connections: A Fast Graph-Based Method for Link Analysis and Collaboration Queries
%U http://www.autonlab.org/autonweb/14634/version/3/part/5/data/kubica_ICML2003.pdf?branch=main&language=en
%X Many techniques in the social sciences and graph theory deal with the problem of examining and analyzing patterns found in the underlying structure and associations of a group of entities. However, much of this work assumes that this underlying structure is known or can easily be inferred from data, which may often be an unrealistic assumption for many real-world problems. Below we consider the problem of learning and querying a graph-based model of this underlying structure. The model is learned from noisy observations linking sets of entities. We explicitly allow different types of links (representing different types of relations) and temporal information indicating when a link was observed. We quantitatively compare this representation and learning method against other algorithms on the task of predicting future links and new "friendships" in a variety of real world data sets.
@article{citeulike:580813,
abstract = {Many techniques in the social sciences and graph theory deal with the problem of examining and analyzing patterns found in the underlying structure and associations of a group of entities. However, much of this work assumes that this underlying structure is known or can easily be inferred from data, which may often be an unrealistic assumption for many real-world problems. Below we consider the problem of learning and querying a graph-based model of this underlying structure. The model is learned from noisy observations linking sets of entities. We explicitly allow different types of links (representing different types of relations) and temporal information indicating when a link was observed. We quantitatively compare this representation and learning method against other algorithms on the task of predicting future links and new "friendships" in a variety of real world data sets.},
added-at = {2006-09-25T12:54:00.000+0200},
author = {Kubica, Jeremy and Moore, Andrew and Cohn, David and Schneider, Jeff},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f01a6389515be34a9025c698f91a0b28/grahl},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on Machine Learning ICML'03},
citeulike-article-id = {580813},
comment = {dataset available at http://www.autonlab.org/autonweb/datasets/15963.html},
interhash = {8e014599f8ef9d40c17e2c4b761758c7},
intrahash = {f01a6389515be34a9025c698f91a0b28},
keywords = {community},
priority = {2},
timestamp = {2006-09-25T12:54:00.000+0200},
title = {Finding Underlying Connections: A Fast Graph-Based Method for Link Analysis and Collaboration Queries},
url = {http://www.autonlab.org/autonweb/14634/version/3/part/5/data/kubica_ICML2003.pdf?branch=main\&language=en},
year = 2003
}