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Why the Metric Backbone Preserves Community Structure

31 December 2024
Maximilien Dreveton
Charbel Chucri
Matthias Grossglauser
Patrick Thiran
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Abstract

The metric backbone of a weighted graph is the union of all-pairs shortest paths. It is obtained by removing all edges (u,v)(u,v)(u,v) that are not the shortest path between uuu and vvv. In networks with well-separated communities, the metric backbone tends to preserve many inter-community edges, because these edges serve as bridges connecting two communities, but tends to delete many intra-community edges because the communities are dense. This suggests that the metric backbone would dilute or destroy the community structure of the network. However, this is not borne out by prior empirical work, which instead showed that the metric backbone of real networks preserves the community structure of the original network well. In this work, we analyze the metric backbone of a broad class of weighted random graphs with communities, and we formally prove the robustness of the community structure with respect to the deletion of all the edges that are not in the metric backbone. An empirical comparison of several graph sparsification techniques confirms our theoretical finding and shows that the metric backbone is an efficient sparsifier in the presence of communities.

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