Department of Mathematics,
University of California San Diego
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Special Colloquium
Sebastien Roch
Microsoft Research
Cascade Processes in Social Networks
Abstract:
Social networks are often represented by directed graphs where the nodes are individuals and the edges indicate a form of social relationship. A simple way to model the diffusion of ideas, innovative behavior, or word-of-mouth effects on such a graph is to consider a stochastic process of ``infection'': each node becomes infected once an activation function of the set of its infected neighbors crosses a random threshold value. I will prove a conjecture of Kempe, Kleinberg, and Tardos which roughly states that if such a process is ``locally'' submodular then it must be ``globally'' submodular on average. The significance of this result is that it leads to a good algorithmic solution to the problem of maximizing the spread of influence in the network--a problem known in data mining as "viral marketing"'. This is joint work with Elchanan Mossel.
Host: Pat Fitzsimmons
January 10, 2008
1:00 PM
AP&M 2402
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