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Prédiction de liens×Détection de communautés×Réseau neuronal à graphes×
DomaineAnalyse de réseauxAnalyse de réseauxAnalyse de réseaux
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20032002–2019 (algorithm family)2017–2018 (major variants)
Auteur d'origineLouvain: Blondel et al. (2008); Leiden: Traag et al. (2019); Girvan-Newman: Girvan & Newman (2002); Infomap: Rosvall & Bergstrom (2008)
TypeNetwork inference taskGraph-partitioning / clustering algorithm familyDeep learning on graph-structured data
Source fondatriceLiben-Nowell, D. & Kleinberg, J. (2007). The Link-Prediction Problem for Social Networks. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 58(7), 1019-1031. DOI ↗Blondel, V.D., Guillaume, J.-L., Lambiotte, R. & Lefebvre, E. (2008). Fast Unfolding of Communities in Large Networks. Journal of Statistical Mechanics, 2008(10), P10008. DOI ↗Kipf, T.N. & Welling, M. (2017). Semi-Supervised Classification with Graph Convolutional Networks. International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR). DOI ↗
AliasBağlantı Tahmini (Link Prediction), missing link prediction, future link prediction, edge predictiongraph clustering, network partitioning, Topluluk Tespiti (Louvain, Girvan-Newman, Leiden)GNN, GCN, GAT, GraphSAGE
Apparentées555
RésuméLink prediction is a network-analysis task that estimates which edges are missing from an observed graph or which edges are likely to form in the future. Formalised by Liben-Nowell and Kleinberg (2003, 2007), it covers a spectrum of approaches — from simple structural similarity indices such as Common Neighbors, Jaccard coefficient, and Adamic-Adar, to matrix factorisation, and graph neural network (GNN) methods — and is evaluated with AUC and Average Precision to account for the heavily imbalanced ratio of real to non-existing edges.Community detection is a family of graph-partitioning algorithms that discover densely connected sub-groups — communities — within a network. First formalised through the modularity measure by Girvan and Newman (2002), the field advanced rapidly with the Louvain method (Blondel et al., 2008), the Leiden refinement (Traag et al., 2019), and the information-theoretic Infomap approach. All variants answer the same question: which nodes cluster together more tightly among themselves than with the rest of the network?A Graph Neural Network (GNN) is a deep learning architecture that operates directly on graph-structured data by combining node features with structural information through iterative neighborhood message passing. The three canonical variants — the Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) introduced by Kipf and Welling in 2017, the Graph Attention Network (GAT) introduced by Veličković et al. in 2018, and GraphSAGE — differ in how they aggregate neighbor information: GCN applies a spectral convolution over the full adjacency, GAT weights neighbors by learned attention scores, and GraphSAGE samples and aggregates local neighborhoods inductively, enabling generalization to unseen nodes.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Link Prediction · Community Detection · Graph Neural Network (Network Analysis). Consulté le 2026-06-18 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare