Sample Complexity of Linear Regression Models for Opinion Formation in Networks
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33531Abstract
Consider public health officials aiming to spread awareness about a new vaccine in a community interconnected by a social network. How can they distribute information with minimal resources, so as to avoid polarization and ensure community-wide convergence of opinion? To tackle such challenges, we initiate the study of sample complexity of opinion formation in networks. Our framework is built on the recognized opinion formation game, where we regard each agent’s opinion as a data-derived model, unlike previous works that treat opinions as data-independent scalars. The opinion model for every agent is initially learned from its local samples and evolves game-theoretically as all agents communicate with neighbors and revise their models towards an equilibrium. Our focus is on the sample complexity needed to ensure that the opinions converge to an equilibrium such that every agent’s final model has low generalization error. Our paper has two main technical results. First, we present a novel polynomial time optimization framework to quantify the total sample complexity for arbitrary networks, when the underlying learning problem is (generalized) linear regression. Second, we leverage this optimization to study the network gain which measures the improvement of sample complexity when learning over a network compared to that in isolation. Towards this end, we derive network gain bounds for various network classes including cliques, star graphs, and random regular graphs. Additionally, our framework provides a method to study sample distribution within the network, suggesting that it is sufficient to allocate samples inversely to the degree. Empirical results on both synthetic and real-world networks strongly support our theoretical findings.Downloads
Published
2025-04-11
How to Cite
Liu, H., Rajaraman, R., Sundaram, R., Vullikanti, A. K., Wasim, O., & Xu, H. (2025). Sample Complexity of Linear Regression Models for Opinion Formation in Networks. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 39(13), 13993-14001. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33531
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Section
AAAI Technical Track on Game Theory and Economic Paradigms