Abstract

Social networks have greatly amplified spread of information across different communities. However, we recently observe that various malicious information, such as computer virus and rumors, are broadly spread via social networks. To restrict these malicious information, it is critical to develop effective method to discover the diffusion source nodes in social networks. Many pioneer works have explored the source node identification problem, but they all based on an ideal assumption that there is only a single source node, neglecting the fact that malicious information are often diffused from multiple sources to intentionally avoid network audit. In this paper, we present a multi-source locating method based on a given snapshot of partially and sparsely observed infected nodes in the network. Specifically, we first present a reverse propagation method to detect recovered and unobserved infected nodes in the network, and then we use community cluster algorithms to change the multi-source locating problem into a bunch of single source locating problems. At the last step, we identify the nodes having the largest likelihood estimations as the source node on the infected clusters. Experiments on three different types of complex networks show the performance of the proposed method.

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