2023 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-37
Author(s):  
Claudio D. T. Barros ◽  
Matheus R. F. Mendonça ◽  
Alex B. Vieira ◽  
Artur Ziviani

Embedding static graphs in low-dimensional vector spaces plays a key role in network analytics and inference, supporting applications like node classification, link prediction, and graph visualization. However, many real-world networks present dynamic behavior, including topological evolution, feature evolution, and diffusion. Therefore, several methods for embedding dynamic graphs have been proposed to learn network representations over time, facing novel challenges, such as time-domain modeling, temporal features to be captured, and the temporal granularity to be embedded. In this survey, we overview dynamic graph embedding, discussing its fundamentals and the recent advances developed so far. We introduce the formal definition of dynamic graph embedding, focusing on the problem setting and introducing a novel taxonomy for dynamic graph embedding input and output. We further explore different dynamic behaviors that may be encompassed by embeddings, classifying by topological evolution, feature evolution, and processes on networks. Afterward, we describe existing techniques and propose a taxonomy for dynamic graph embedding techniques based on algorithmic approaches, from matrix and tensor factorization to deep learning, random walks, and temporal point processes. We also elucidate main applications, including dynamic link prediction, anomaly detection, and diffusion prediction, and we further state some promising research directions in the area.


2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabian Beck ◽  
Michael Burch ◽  
Stephan Diehl ◽  
Daniel Weiskopf

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. e0247587
Author(s):  
Toshiyuki T. Yokoyama ◽  
Masashi Okada ◽  
Tadahiro Taniguchi

Annual recruitment data of new graduates are manually analyzed by human resources (HR) specialists in industries, which signifies the need to evaluate the recruitment strategy of HR specialists. Different job seekers send applications to companies every year. The relationships between applicants’ attributes (e.g., English skill or academic credentials) can be used to analyze the changes in recruitment trends across multiple years. However, most attributes are unnormalized and thus require thorough preprocessing. Such unnormalized data hinder effective comparison of the relationship between applicants in the early stage of data analysis. Thus, a visual exploration system is highly needed to gain insight from the overview of the relationship among applicant qualifications across multiple years. In this study, we propose the Polarizing Attributes for Network Analysis of Correlation on Entities Association (Panacea) visualization system. The proposed system integrates a time-varying graph model and dynamic graph visualization for heterogeneous tabular data. Using this system, HR specialists can interactively inspect the relationships between two attributes of prospective employees across multiple years. Further, we demonstrate the usability of Panacea with representative examples for finding hidden trends in real-world datasets, and we discuss feedback from HR specialists obtained throughout Panacea’s development. The proposed Panacea system enables HR specialists to visually explore the annual recruitment of new graduates.


Author(s):  
Moataz Abdelaal ◽  
Antoine Lhuillier ◽  
Marcel Hlawatsch ◽  
Daniel Weiskopf

Algorithms ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 290
Author(s):  
Fabio Sikansi ◽  
Renato R. O. da Silva ◽  
Gabriel D. Cantareira ◽  
Elham Etemad ◽  
Fernando V. Paulovich

Graph visualization has been successfully applied in a wide range of problems and applications. Although different approaches are available to create visual representations, most of them suffer from clutter when faced with many nodes and/or edges. Among the techniques that address this problem, edge bundling has attained relative success in improving node-link layouts by bending and aggregating edges. Despite their success, most approaches perform the bundling based only on visual space information. There is no explicit connection between the produced bundled visual representation and the underlying data (edges or vertices attributes). In this paper, we present a novel edge bundling technique, called Similarity-Driven Edge Bundling (SDEB), to address this issue. Our method creates a similarity hierarchy based on a multilevel partition of the data, grouping edges considering the similarity between nodes to guide the bundling. The novel features introduced by SDEB are explored in different application scenarios, from dynamic graph visualization to multilevel exploration. Our results attest that SDEB produces layouts that consistently follow the similarity relationships found in the graph data, resulting in semantically richer presentations that are less cluttered than the state-of-the-art.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document