Abstract

Besides social network analysis, the Link-Prediction (LP) problem has useful applications in information retrieval, bioinformatics, telecommunications, microbiology, and e-commerce as a forecast of future links in a given context to find what possible connections are based on a local and global statistical analysis of the given graph data. However, in Academic Social Networks (ASNs), the LP issue has recently attracted a lot of attention in academia and called for a variety of link prediction techniques to predict co-authorship among researchers and to examine the rich structural and associated data. As a result, this study investigates the problem of LP in ASNs to forecast the upcoming co-authorships among researchers. In a systematic approach, this review presents, analyses, and compares the primary taxonomies of topological-based, content-based, and hybrid-based approaches, which are used for computing similar scores for each pair of unconnected nodes. Then, this study ends with findings on challenges and open problems for the community to work on for further development of the LP problem of scholarly social networks.

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