Min Xu is an assistant professor in the Statistics Department at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. He obtained his PhD from Carnegie Mellon University and was previously a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests include network data analysis, nonparametric estimation, and statistical learning. His work has addressed an array of problems, including community detection on weighted SBM, high-dimensional log-concave density estimation, ICA models, and more.
Talk: Root and community inference on Markovian models of networks
Abstract: Preferential attachment (PA) is a popular way of modeling random networks in which the network starts as a single node which we call the root node, and at every new time step, a new node and new edges are added to the network; this dynamic captures the growth/recruitment process that underlies many real-world networks.
Given only a single snapshot of the final network G, we study the problem of constructing confidence sets for the early history, in particular the root node, of the unobserved growth process; the root node can be patient zero in a disease infection network or the source of fake news in a social media network.
We consider random network generated by adding noisy edges to a PA tree and derive an inference algorithm based on Gibbs sampling that scales to networks with millions of nodes. We provide theoretical analysis showing that the expected size of the confidence set is small so long as the noise level is not too large. We also propose variations of the model in which multiple growth processes occur simultaneously from multiple root nodes, reflecting the formation of multiple communities, and we use these models to provide a new approach to community detection.