564 lines
23 KiB
Python
564 lines
23 KiB
Python
"""
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Graph summarization finds smaller representations of graphs resulting in faster
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runtime of algorithms, reduced storage needs, and noise reduction.
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Summarization has applications in areas such as visualization, pattern mining,
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clustering and community detection, and more. Core graph summarization
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techniques are grouping/aggregation, bit-compression,
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simplification/sparsification, and influence based. Graph summarization
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algorithms often produce either summary graphs in the form of supergraphs or
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sparsified graphs, or a list of independent structures. Supergraphs are the
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most common product, which consist of supernodes and original nodes and are
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connected by edges and superedges, which represent aggregate edges between
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nodes and supernodes.
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Grouping/aggregation based techniques compress graphs by representing
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close/connected nodes and edges in a graph by a single node/edge in a
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supergraph. Nodes can be grouped together into supernodes based on their
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structural similarities or proximity within a graph to reduce the total number
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of nodes in a graph. Edge-grouping techniques group edges into lossy/lossless
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nodes called compressor or virtual nodes to reduce the total number of edges in
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a graph. Edge-grouping techniques can be lossless, meaning that they can be
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used to re-create the original graph, or techniques can be lossy, requiring
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less space to store the summary graph, but at the expense of lower
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reconstruction accuracy of the original graph.
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Bit-compression techniques minimize the amount of information needed to
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describe the original graph, while revealing structural patterns in the
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original graph. The two-part minimum description length (MDL) is often used to
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represent the model and the original graph in terms of the model. A key
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difference between graph compression and graph summarization is that graph
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summarization focuses on finding structural patterns within the original graph,
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whereas graph compression focuses on compressions the original graph to be as
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small as possible. **NOTE**: Some bit-compression methods exist solely to
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compress a graph without creating a summary graph or finding comprehensible
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structural patterns.
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Simplification/Sparsification techniques attempt to create a sparse
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representation of a graph by removing unimportant nodes and edges from the
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graph. Sparsified graphs differ from supergraphs created by
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grouping/aggregation by only containing a subset of the original nodes and
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edges of the original graph.
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Influence based techniques aim to find a high-level description of influence
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propagation in a large graph. These methods are scarce and have been mostly
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applied to social graphs.
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*dedensification* is a grouping/aggregation based technique to compress the
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neighborhoods around high-degree nodes in unweighted graphs by adding
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compressor nodes that summarize multiple edges of the same type to
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high-degree nodes (nodes with a degree greater than a given threshold).
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Dedensification was developed for the purpose of increasing performance of
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query processing around high-degree nodes in graph databases and enables direct
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operations on the compressed graph. The structural patterns surrounding
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high-degree nodes in the original is preserved while using fewer edges and
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adding a small number of compressor nodes. The degree of nodes present in the
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original graph is also preserved. The current implementation of dedensification
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supports graphs with one edge type.
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For more information on graph summarization, see `Graph Summarization Methods
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and Applications: A Survey <https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3186727>`_
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"""
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from collections import Counter, defaultdict
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import networkx as nx
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__all__ = ["dedensify", "snap_aggregation"]
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@nx._dispatchable(mutates_input={"not copy": 3}, returns_graph=True)
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def dedensify(G, threshold, prefix=None, copy=True):
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"""Compresses neighborhoods around high-degree nodes
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Reduces the number of edges to high-degree nodes by adding compressor nodes
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that summarize multiple edges of the same type to high-degree nodes (nodes
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with a degree greater than a given threshold). Dedensification also has
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the added benefit of reducing the number of edges around high-degree nodes.
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The implementation currently supports graphs with a single edge type.
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Parameters
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----------
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G: graph
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A networkx graph
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threshold: int
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Minimum degree threshold of a node to be considered a high degree node.
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The threshold must be greater than or equal to 2.
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prefix: str or None, optional (default: None)
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An optional prefix for denoting compressor nodes
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copy: bool, optional (default: True)
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Indicates if dedensification should be done inplace
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Returns
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-------
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dedensified networkx graph : (graph, set)
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2-tuple of the dedensified graph and set of compressor nodes
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Notes
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-----
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According to the algorithm in [1]_, removes edges in a graph by
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compressing/decompressing the neighborhoods around high degree nodes by
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adding compressor nodes that summarize multiple edges of the same type
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to high-degree nodes. Dedensification will only add a compressor node when
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doing so will reduce the total number of edges in the given graph. This
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implementation currently supports graphs with a single edge type.
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Examples
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--------
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Dedensification will only add compressor nodes when doing so would result
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in fewer edges::
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>>> original_graph = nx.DiGraph()
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>>> original_graph.add_nodes_from(
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... ["1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "A", "B", "C"]
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... )
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>>> original_graph.add_edges_from(
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... [
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... ("1", "C"), ("1", "B"),
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... ("2", "C"), ("2", "B"), ("2", "A"),
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... ("3", "B"), ("3", "A"), ("3", "6"),
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... ("4", "C"), ("4", "B"), ("4", "A"),
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... ("5", "B"), ("5", "A"),
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... ("6", "5"),
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... ("A", "6")
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... ]
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... )
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>>> c_graph, c_nodes = nx.dedensify(original_graph, threshold=2)
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>>> original_graph.number_of_edges()
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15
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>>> c_graph.number_of_edges()
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14
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A dedensified, directed graph can be "densified" to reconstruct the
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original graph::
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>>> original_graph = nx.DiGraph()
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>>> original_graph.add_nodes_from(
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... ["1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "A", "B", "C"]
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... )
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>>> original_graph.add_edges_from(
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... [
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... ("1", "C"), ("1", "B"),
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... ("2", "C"), ("2", "B"), ("2", "A"),
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... ("3", "B"), ("3", "A"), ("3", "6"),
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... ("4", "C"), ("4", "B"), ("4", "A"),
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... ("5", "B"), ("5", "A"),
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... ("6", "5"),
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... ("A", "6")
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... ]
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... )
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>>> c_graph, c_nodes = nx.dedensify(original_graph, threshold=2)
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>>> # re-densifies the compressed graph into the original graph
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>>> for c_node in c_nodes:
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... all_neighbors = set(nx.all_neighbors(c_graph, c_node))
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... out_neighbors = set(c_graph.neighbors(c_node))
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... for out_neighbor in out_neighbors:
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... c_graph.remove_edge(c_node, out_neighbor)
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... in_neighbors = all_neighbors - out_neighbors
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... for in_neighbor in in_neighbors:
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... c_graph.remove_edge(in_neighbor, c_node)
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... for out_neighbor in out_neighbors:
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... c_graph.add_edge(in_neighbor, out_neighbor)
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... c_graph.remove_node(c_node)
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...
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>>> nx.is_isomorphic(original_graph, c_graph)
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True
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References
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----------
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.. [1] Maccioni, A., & Abadi, D. J. (2016, August).
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Scalable pattern matching over compressed graphs via dedensification.
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In Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGKDD International Conference on
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Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (pp. 1755-1764).
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http://www.cs.umd.edu/~abadi/papers/graph-dedense.pdf
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"""
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if threshold < 2:
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raise nx.NetworkXError("The degree threshold must be >= 2")
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degrees = G.in_degree if G.is_directed() else G.degree
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# Group nodes based on degree threshold
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high_degree_nodes = {n for n, d in degrees if d > threshold}
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low_degree_nodes = G.nodes() - high_degree_nodes
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auxiliary = {}
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for node in G:
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high_degree_nbrs = frozenset(high_degree_nodes & set(G[node]))
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if high_degree_nbrs:
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if high_degree_nbrs in auxiliary:
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auxiliary[high_degree_nbrs].add(node)
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else:
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auxiliary[high_degree_nbrs] = {node}
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if copy:
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G = G.copy()
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compressor_nodes = set()
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for index, (high_degree_nodes, low_degree_nodes) in enumerate(auxiliary.items()):
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low_degree_node_count = len(low_degree_nodes)
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high_degree_node_count = len(high_degree_nodes)
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old_edges = high_degree_node_count * low_degree_node_count
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new_edges = high_degree_node_count + low_degree_node_count
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if old_edges <= new_edges:
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continue
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compression_node = "".join(str(node) for node in high_degree_nodes)
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if prefix:
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compression_node = str(prefix) + compression_node
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for node in low_degree_nodes:
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for high_node in high_degree_nodes:
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if G.has_edge(node, high_node):
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G.remove_edge(node, high_node)
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G.add_edge(node, compression_node)
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for node in high_degree_nodes:
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G.add_edge(compression_node, node)
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compressor_nodes.add(compression_node)
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return G, compressor_nodes
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def _snap_build_graph(
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G,
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groups,
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node_attributes,
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edge_attributes,
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neighbor_info,
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edge_types,
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prefix,
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supernode_attribute,
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superedge_attribute,
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):
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"""
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Build the summary graph from the data structures produced in the SNAP aggregation algorithm
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Used in the SNAP aggregation algorithm to build the output summary graph and supernode
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lookup dictionary. This process uses the original graph and the data structures to
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create the supernodes with the correct node attributes, and the superedges with the correct
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edge attributes
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Parameters
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----------
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G: networkx.Graph
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the original graph to be summarized
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groups: dict
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A dictionary of unique group IDs and their corresponding node groups
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node_attributes: iterable
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An iterable of the node attributes considered in the summarization process
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edge_attributes: iterable
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An iterable of the edge attributes considered in the summarization process
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neighbor_info: dict
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A data structure indicating the number of edges a node has with the
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groups in the current summarization of each edge type
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edge_types: dict
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dictionary of edges in the graph and their corresponding attributes recognized
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in the summarization
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prefix: string
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The prefix to be added to all supernodes
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supernode_attribute: str
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The node attribute for recording the supernode groupings of nodes
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superedge_attribute: str
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The edge attribute for recording the edge types represented by superedges
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Returns
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-------
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summary graph: Networkx graph
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"""
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output = G.__class__()
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node_label_lookup = {}
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for index, group_id in enumerate(groups):
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group_set = groups[group_id]
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supernode = f"{prefix}{index}"
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node_label_lookup[group_id] = supernode
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supernode_attributes = {
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attr: G.nodes[next(iter(group_set))][attr] for attr in node_attributes
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}
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supernode_attributes[supernode_attribute] = group_set
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output.add_node(supernode, **supernode_attributes)
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for group_id in groups:
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group_set = groups[group_id]
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source_supernode = node_label_lookup[group_id]
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for other_group, group_edge_types in neighbor_info[
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next(iter(group_set))
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].items():
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if group_edge_types:
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target_supernode = node_label_lookup[other_group]
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summary_graph_edge = (source_supernode, target_supernode)
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edge_types = [
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dict(zip(edge_attributes, edge_type))
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for edge_type in group_edge_types
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]
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has_edge = output.has_edge(*summary_graph_edge)
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if output.is_multigraph():
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if not has_edge:
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for edge_type in edge_types:
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output.add_edge(*summary_graph_edge, **edge_type)
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elif not output.is_directed():
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existing_edge_data = output.get_edge_data(*summary_graph_edge)
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for edge_type in edge_types:
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if edge_type not in existing_edge_data.values():
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output.add_edge(*summary_graph_edge, **edge_type)
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else:
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superedge_attributes = {superedge_attribute: edge_types}
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output.add_edge(*summary_graph_edge, **superedge_attributes)
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return output
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def _snap_eligible_group(G, groups, group_lookup, edge_types):
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"""
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Determines if a group is eligible to be split.
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A group is eligible to be split if all nodes in the group have edges of the same type(s)
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with the same other groups.
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Parameters
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----------
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G: graph
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graph to be summarized
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groups: dict
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A dictionary of unique group IDs and their corresponding node groups
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group_lookup: dict
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dictionary of nodes and their current corresponding group ID
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edge_types: dict
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dictionary of edges in the graph and their corresponding attributes recognized
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in the summarization
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Returns
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-------
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tuple: group ID to split, and neighbor-groups participation_counts data structure
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"""
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nbr_info = {node: {gid: Counter() for gid in groups} for node in group_lookup}
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for group_id in groups:
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current_group = groups[group_id]
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# build nbr_info for nodes in group
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for node in current_group:
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nbr_info[node] = {group_id: Counter() for group_id in groups}
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edges = G.edges(node, keys=True) if G.is_multigraph() else G.edges(node)
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for edge in edges:
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neighbor = edge[1]
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edge_type = edge_types[edge]
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neighbor_group_id = group_lookup[neighbor]
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nbr_info[node][neighbor_group_id][edge_type] += 1
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# check if group_id is eligible to be split
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group_size = len(current_group)
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for other_group_id in groups:
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edge_counts = Counter()
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for node in current_group:
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edge_counts.update(nbr_info[node][other_group_id].keys())
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if not all(count == group_size for count in edge_counts.values()):
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# only the nbr_info of the returned group_id is required for handling group splits
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return group_id, nbr_info
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# if no eligible groups, complete nbr_info is calculated
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return None, nbr_info
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def _snap_split(groups, neighbor_info, group_lookup, group_id):
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"""
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Splits a group based on edge types and updates the groups accordingly
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Splits the group with the given group_id based on the edge types
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of the nodes so that each new grouping will all have the same
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edges with other nodes.
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Parameters
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----------
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groups: dict
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A dictionary of unique group IDs and their corresponding node groups
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neighbor_info: dict
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A data structure indicating the number of edges a node has with the
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groups in the current summarization of each edge type
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edge_types: dict
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dictionary of edges in the graph and their corresponding attributes recognized
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in the summarization
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group_lookup: dict
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dictionary of nodes and their current corresponding group ID
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group_id: object
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ID of group to be split
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Returns
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-------
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dict
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The updated groups based on the split
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"""
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new_group_mappings = defaultdict(set)
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for node in groups[group_id]:
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signature = tuple(
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frozenset(edge_types) for edge_types in neighbor_info[node].values()
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)
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new_group_mappings[signature].add(node)
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# leave the biggest new_group as the original group
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new_groups = sorted(new_group_mappings.values(), key=len)
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for new_group in new_groups[:-1]:
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# Assign unused integer as the new_group_id
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# ids are tuples, so will not interact with the original group_ids
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new_group_id = len(groups)
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groups[new_group_id] = new_group
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groups[group_id] -= new_group
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for node in new_group:
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group_lookup[node] = new_group_id
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return groups
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@nx._dispatchable(
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node_attrs="[node_attributes]", edge_attrs="[edge_attributes]", returns_graph=True
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)
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def snap_aggregation(
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G,
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node_attributes,
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edge_attributes=(),
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prefix="Supernode-",
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supernode_attribute="group",
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superedge_attribute="types",
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):
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"""Creates a summary graph based on attributes and connectivity.
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This function uses the Summarization by Grouping Nodes on Attributes
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and Pairwise edges (SNAP) algorithm for summarizing a given
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graph by grouping nodes by node attributes and their edge attributes
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into supernodes in a summary graph. This name SNAP should not be
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confused with the Stanford Network Analysis Project (SNAP).
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Here is a high-level view of how this algorithm works:
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1) Group nodes by node attribute values.
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2) Iteratively split groups until all nodes in each group have edges
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to nodes in the same groups. That is, until all the groups are homogeneous
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in their member nodes' edges to other groups. For example,
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if all the nodes in group A only have edge to nodes in group B, then the
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group is homogeneous and does not need to be split. If all nodes in group B
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have edges with nodes in groups {A, C}, but some also have edges with other
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nodes in B, then group B is not homogeneous and needs to be split into
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groups have edges with {A, C} and a group of nodes having
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edges with {A, B, C}. This way, viewers of the summary graph can
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assume that all nodes in the group have the exact same node attributes and
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the exact same edges.
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3) Build the output summary graph, where the groups are represented by
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super-nodes. Edges represent the edges shared between all the nodes in each
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respective groups.
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A SNAP summary graph can be used to visualize graphs that are too large to display
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or visually analyze, or to efficiently identify sets of similar nodes with similar connectivity
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patterns to other sets of similar nodes based on specified node and/or edge attributes in a graph.
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Parameters
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----------
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G: graph
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Networkx Graph to be summarized
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node_attributes: iterable, required
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An iterable of the node attributes used to group nodes in the summarization process. Nodes
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with the same values for these attributes will be grouped together in the summary graph.
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edge_attributes: iterable, optional
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An iterable of the edge attributes considered in the summarization process. If provided, unique
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combinations of the attribute values found in the graph are used to
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determine the edge types in the graph. If not provided, all edges
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are considered to be of the same type.
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prefix: str
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The prefix used to denote supernodes in the summary graph. Defaults to 'Supernode-'.
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supernode_attribute: str
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The node attribute for recording the supernode groupings of nodes. Defaults to 'group'.
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superedge_attribute: str
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The edge attribute for recording the edge types of multiple edges. Defaults to 'types'.
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Returns
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-------
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networkx.Graph: summary graph
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Examples
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--------
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SNAP aggregation takes a graph and summarizes it in the context of user-provided
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node and edge attributes such that a viewer can more easily extract and
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analyze the information represented by the graph
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>>> nodes = {
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... "A": dict(color="Red"),
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... "B": dict(color="Red"),
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... "C": dict(color="Red"),
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... "D": dict(color="Red"),
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... "E": dict(color="Blue"),
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... "F": dict(color="Blue"),
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... }
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>>> edges = [
|
||
... ("A", "E", "Strong"),
|
||
... ("B", "F", "Strong"),
|
||
... ("C", "E", "Weak"),
|
||
... ("D", "F", "Weak"),
|
||
... ]
|
||
>>> G = nx.Graph()
|
||
>>> for node in nodes:
|
||
... attributes = nodes[node]
|
||
... G.add_node(node, **attributes)
|
||
>>> for source, target, type in edges:
|
||
... G.add_edge(source, target, type=type)
|
||
>>> node_attributes = ("color",)
|
||
>>> edge_attributes = ("type",)
|
||
>>> summary_graph = nx.snap_aggregation(
|
||
... G, node_attributes=node_attributes, edge_attributes=edge_attributes
|
||
... )
|
||
|
||
Notes
|
||
-----
|
||
The summary graph produced is called a maximum Attribute-edge
|
||
compatible (AR-compatible) grouping. According to [1]_, an
|
||
AR-compatible grouping means that all nodes in each group have the same
|
||
exact node attribute values and the same exact edges and
|
||
edge types to one or more nodes in the same groups. The maximal
|
||
AR-compatible grouping is the grouping with the minimal cardinality.
|
||
|
||
The AR-compatible grouping is the most detailed grouping provided by
|
||
any of the SNAP algorithms.
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
----------
|
||
.. [1] Y. Tian, R. A. Hankins, and J. M. Patel. Efficient aggregation
|
||
for graph summarization. In Proc. 2008 ACM-SIGMOD Int. Conf.
|
||
Management of Data (SIGMOD’08), pages 567–580, Vancouver, Canada,
|
||
June 2008.
|
||
"""
|
||
edge_types = {
|
||
edge: tuple(attrs.get(attr) for attr in edge_attributes)
|
||
for edge, attrs in G.edges.items()
|
||
}
|
||
if not G.is_directed():
|
||
if G.is_multigraph():
|
||
# list is needed to avoid mutating while iterating
|
||
edges = [((v, u, k), etype) for (u, v, k), etype in edge_types.items()]
|
||
else:
|
||
# list is needed to avoid mutating while iterating
|
||
edges = [((v, u), etype) for (u, v), etype in edge_types.items()]
|
||
edge_types.update(edges)
|
||
|
||
group_lookup = {
|
||
node: tuple(attrs[attr] for attr in node_attributes)
|
||
for node, attrs in G.nodes.items()
|
||
}
|
||
groups = defaultdict(set)
|
||
for node, node_type in group_lookup.items():
|
||
groups[node_type].add(node)
|
||
|
||
eligible_group_id, nbr_info = _snap_eligible_group(
|
||
G, groups, group_lookup, edge_types
|
||
)
|
||
while eligible_group_id:
|
||
groups = _snap_split(groups, nbr_info, group_lookup, eligible_group_id)
|
||
eligible_group_id, nbr_info = _snap_eligible_group(
|
||
G, groups, group_lookup, edge_types
|
||
)
|
||
return _snap_build_graph(
|
||
G,
|
||
groups,
|
||
node_attributes,
|
||
edge_attributes,
|
||
nbr_info,
|
||
edge_types,
|
||
prefix,
|
||
supernode_attribute,
|
||
superedge_attribute,
|
||
)
|