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scc-rt-dash     (Temporal Reachability Networks)

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This network dataset is in the category of Temporal Reachability Networks



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Metadata

CategoryTemporal Networks
CollectionTemporal Reachability Networks
Tags
Sourcehttp://www.ryanrossi.com/papers/maxclique_tscc.pdf
ShortRetweet temporal reachability graph
Vertex typeUser
Edge typeTemporal path via retweets
FormatUndirected
Edge weightsUnweighted
DescriptionIn networks where edges represent a contact, a phone-call, an email, or physical proximity between two entities at a specific point in time, one gets an evolving network structure. One useful way to investigate temporal networks is to transform the temporal graph (sequence of timestamped edges) into a (static) temporal reachability graph representing the possible flow of information/influence, etc. The temporal reachability graph is formed by placing an edge in the temporal reachability graph if there exists a "strong" temporal path between two vertices (in both directions: from u to v, and from v to u). Hence, a temporal path represents a sequence of contacts that obeys time and therefore an edge in the temporal reachability graph represents the fact that a user could have transmitted a piece of information (or disease, etc) to that user (and vice-versa). This temporal graph representation is extremely useful for analyzing such networks and for planning applications. For instance, a temporal strong component is a set of vertices where all pairwise temporal paths exist.

Please cite the following if you use the data:

@inproceedings{nr,
     title={The Network Data Repository with Interactive Graph Analytics and Visualization},
     author={Ryan A. Rossi and Nesreen K. Ahmed},
     booktitle={AAAI},
     url={http://networkrepository.com},
     year={2015}
}

Note that if you transform/preprocess the data, please consider sharing the data by uploading it along with the details on the transformation and reference to any published materials using it.

@article{rossi2012fastclique,
     title={What if CLIQUE were fast? Maximum Cliques in Information Networks and Strong Components in Temporal Networks},
     author={Ryan A. Rossi and David F. Gleich and Assefaw H. Gebremedhin and Mostofa A. Patwary},
     journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1210.5802},
     pages={1--11},
     year={2012}
}

Network Data Statistics

Nodes6K
Edges39
Density2.19033e-06
Maximum degree8
Minimum degree0
Average degree0
Assortativity0.381065
Number of triangles84
Average number of triangles0
Maximum number of triangles13
Average clustering coefficient0.00182721
Fraction of closed triangles0.613139
Maximum k-core6
Lower bound of Maximum Clique6

Network Data Preview

Interactive visualization of scc_rt_dash's graph structure

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Interactive Visualization of Node-level Properties and Statistics

Tools for Interactive Exploration of Node-level Statistics

Visualize and interactively explore scc-rt-dash and its important node-level statistics!

  • Each point represents a node (vertex) in the graph.
  • A subset of interesting nodes may be selected and their properties may be visualized across all node-level statistics. To select a subset of nodes, hold down the left mouse button while dragging the mouse in any direction until the nodes of interest are highlighted.This feature allows users to explore and analyze various subsets of nodes and their important interesting statistics and properties to gain insights into the graph data
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Interactive Visualization of Node-level Feature Distributions

Node-level Feature Distributions

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All visualizations and analytics are interactive and flexible for exploratory analysis and data mining in real-time and include the following features:

  • Degree, k-core, triangles, and triangle-core distributions. We include plots for each of the fundamental graph features and counts of the number with a particular property (i.e., number of nodes that form k triangles or have degree k, etc.)
  • We also include the CDF and CCDF distributions for each graph in the collection.
  • All visualizations and plots are zoomable. One may zoom-in or out on the data visualization using scrolling.
  • Panning. Users may also click anywhere on the plot and move the mouse in any direction to pan.
  • Adjust scale and other application dependent-parameters. All interactive visualizations may adjust the scale which is particularly important in certain types of graph data that contain highly skewed graph properties (power-lawed graphs and/or networks) such as degree distribution.

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