Abstract

Ranking algorithms play a crucial role in information technologies and numerical analysis due to their efficiency in high dimensions and wide range of possible applications, including internet ranking, scientometrics, and systemic risk in finance (SinkRank and DebtRank). The traditional approach to internet ranking goes back to the seminal work of Sergey Brin and Larry Page, who developed the initial method PageRank (PR) in order to rank websites for search engine results based on linear algebra rules. But how robust is this method in times of rapid internet growth? Recent works have studied robust reformulations of the PageRank model for the case when links in the network structure may vary; that is, some links may appear or disappear, influencing the transportation matrix defined by the network structure. In this article, the authors make a further step forward, allowing the network to vary not only in links but also in the number of nodes. The authors focus on growing network structures and develop methods for ranking of networks uncertain both in size and in structure.

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