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G-2012-63

A Locally Optimal Hierarchical Divisive Heuristic for bipartite Modularity Maximization

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Given a set of entities, cluster analysis aims at finding subsets, also called clusters or communities or modules, entities of which are homogeneous and well separated. In the last ten years clustering on networks, or graphs, has been a subject of intense study. Edges between pairs of vertices within the same cluster should be relatively dense, while edges between pairs of vertices in different clusters should be relatively sparse. This led Newman to define the modularity of a cluster as the difference between the number of internal edges and the expected number of such edges in a random graph with the same degree distribution. The modularity of a partition of the vertices is the sum of the modularities of its clusters. Modularity has been extended recently to the case of bipartite graphs. In this paper we propose a hierarchical divisive heuristic for approximate modularity maximization in bipartite graphs. The subproblem of bipartitioning a cluster is solved exactly; hence the heuristic is locally optimal. Several formulations of this subproblem are presented and compared. Some are much better than others, which illustrates the importance of reformulations. Computational experiences on a series of ten test problems from the literature are reported.

, 16 pages

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A locally optimal hierarchical divisive heuristic for bipartite modularity maximization
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Optimization Letters, 8(3), 903–917, 2014 BibTeX reference