The Time-Series Link Prediction Problem with Applications in Communication Surveillance

2009 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zan Huang ◽  
Dennis K. J. Lin
Author(s):  
Muhammad Faheem Mushtaq ◽  
Urooj Akram ◽  
Muhammad Aamir ◽  
Haseeb Ali ◽  
Muhammad Zulqarnain

It is important to predict a time series because many problems that are related to prediction such as health prediction problem, climate change prediction problem and weather prediction problem include a time component. To solve the time series prediction problem various techniques have been developed over many years to enhance the accuracy of forecasting. This paper presents a review of the prediction of physical time series applications using the neural network models. Neural Networks (NN) have appeared as an effective tool for forecasting of time series.  Moreover, to resolve the problems related to time series data, there is a need of network with single layer trainable weights that is Higher Order Neural Network (HONN) which can perform nonlinearity mapping of input-output. So, the developers are focusing on HONN that has been recently considered to develop the input representation spaces broadly. The HONN model has the ability of functional mapping which determined through some time series problems and it shows the more benefits as compared to conventional Artificial Neural Networks (ANN). The goal of this research is to present the reader awareness about HONN for physical time series prediction, to highlight some benefits and challenges using HONN.


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 664
Author(s):  
Nikos Kanakaris ◽  
Nikolaos Giarelis ◽  
Ilias Siachos ◽  
Nikos Karacapilidis

We consider the prediction of future research collaborations as a link prediction problem applied on a scientific knowledge graph. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work on the prediction of future research collaborations that combines structural and textual information of a scientific knowledge graph through a purposeful integration of graph algorithms and natural language processing techniques. Our work: (i) investigates whether the integration of unstructured textual data into a single knowledge graph affects the performance of a link prediction model, (ii) studies the effect of previously proposed graph kernels based approaches on the performance of an ML model, as far as the link prediction problem is concerned, and (iii) proposes a three-phase pipeline that enables the exploitation of structural and textual information, as well as of pre-trained word embeddings. We benchmark the proposed approach against classical link prediction algorithms using accuracy, recall, and precision as our performance metrics. Finally, we empirically test our approach through various feature combinations with respect to the link prediction problem. Our experimentations with the new COVID-19 Open Research Dataset demonstrate a significant improvement of the abovementioned performance metrics in the prediction of future research collaborations.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zachary Stanfield ◽  
Mustafa Coşkun ◽  
Mehmet Koyutürk

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (0) ◽  
pp. 752-761
Author(s):  
Faith Mutinda ◽  
Atsuhiro Nakashima ◽  
Koh Takeuchi ◽  
Yuya Sasaki ◽  
Makoto Onizuka
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (01) ◽  
pp. 241-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alper Ozcan ◽  
Sule Gunduz Oguducu

Link prediction is considered as one of the key tasks in various data mining applications for recommendation systems, bioinformatics, security and worldwide web. The majority of previous works in link prediction mainly focus on the homogeneous networks which only consider one type of node and link. However, real-world networks have heterogeneous interactions and complicated dynamic structure, which make link prediction a more challenging task. In this paper, we have studied the problem of link prediction in the dynamic, undirected, weighted/unweighted, heterogeneous social networks which are composed of multiple types of nodes and links that change over time. We propose a novel method, called Multivariate Time Series Link Prediction for evolving heterogeneous networks that incorporate (1) temporal evolution of the network; (2) correlations between link evolution and multi-typed relationships; (3) local and global similarity measures; and (4) node connectivity information. Our proposed method and the previously proposed time series methods are evaluated experimentally on a real-world bibliographic network (DBLP) and a social bookmarking network (Delicious). Experimental results show that the proposed method outperforms the previous methods in terms of AUC measures in different test cases.


Author(s):  
Cristiano Melo ◽  
Matheus Lima da Cruz ◽  
Antônio Martins ◽  
José Filho ◽  
Javam Machado

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