Preventing Unraveling in Social Networks Gets Harder

Authors

  • Rajesh Chitnis University of Maryland, College Park
  • Fedor Fomin University of Bergen
  • Petr Golovach University of Bergen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v27i1.8462

Keywords:

Social networks, parameterized complexity, planar graphs

Abstract

The behavior of users in social networks is often observed to be affected by the actions of their friends. Bhawalkar et al. (ICALP '12) introduced a formal mathematical model for user engagement in social networks where each individual derives a benefit proportional to the number of its friends which are engaged. Given a threshold degree k the equilibrium for this model is a maximal subgraph whose minimum degree is at least k. However the dropping out of individuals with degrees less than k might lead to a cascading effect of iterated withdrawals such that the size of equilibrium subgraph becomes very small. To overcome this some special vertices called "anchors" are introduced: these vertices need not have large degree. Bhawalkar et al. considered the Anchored k-Core problem: Given a graph G and integers b, k and p do there exist sets of vertices B, H such that B is a subset of H, size of B is at most b and size of H is at least p, and every vertex v which is in H but not in B has degree at least k in the induced subgraph G[H]. They showed that the problem is NP-hard for all k greater equal 2, and gave some inapproximability and fixed-parameter intractability results. In this paper we give improved hardness results for this problem. In particular we show that the Anchored k-Core problem is W[1]-hard parameterized by p, even for k=3. This improves the result of Bhawalkar et al.  (who show W[2]-hardness parameterized by b) as our parameter is always bigger since p is greater equal than b. Then we answer a question of Bhawalkar et al. by showing that the Anchored k-Core problem remains NP-hard on planar graphs for all k greater equal 3, even if the maximum degree of the graph is k+2. Finally we show that the problem is FPT on planar graphs parameterized by b for all k greater equal 7.

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Published

2013-06-29

How to Cite

Chitnis, R., Fomin, F., & Golovach, P. (2013). Preventing Unraveling in Social Networks Gets Harder. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 27(1), 1085-1091. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v27i1.8462