Tight Bounds for Influence in Diffusion Networks and Application to Bond Percolation and Epidemiology

Part of Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 27 (NIPS 2014)

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Authors

Remi Lemonnier, Kevin Scaman, Nicolas Vayatis

Abstract

In this paper, we derive theoretical bounds for the long-term influence of a node in an Independent Cascade Model (ICM). We relate these bounds to the spectral radius of a particular matrix and show that the behavior is sub-critical when this spectral radius is lower than 1. More specifically, we point out that, in general networks, the sub-critical regime behaves in O(sqrt(n)) where n is the size of the network, and that this upper bound is met for star-shaped networks. We apply our results to epidemiology and percolation on arbitrary networks, and derive a bound for the critical value beyond which a giant connected component arises. Finally, we show empirically the tightness of our bounds for a large family of networks.