Abstract

Community structure is a fundamental feature for many networks. The problem of discovering communities in those networks thus has been attracting a lot of research. However, due to the rapid increase of networks’ scale and the availability of real communities in many networks, the task of detecting communities in large real networks remains a challenging problem. In this paper, we study the structure of various large real networks and their ground-truth community structures and observe an interesting phenomenon: the difference of degrees (abbreviated as dod) of connected nodes follows a heavy-tailed distribution with an approximate power-law tail for large dod, in both original network and community structure but to different extents. With the aim to explore the effect of this observation on identifying communities in real large networks, we propose a weighting strategy and further embed it into two prominent community detection algorithms. Comparisons against the state of the arts demonstrate a very promising performance of the proposed weighting strategy.

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