Sunday, July 10, 2016

Networks, Complexity and Scientific Discovery

From nanowerk:

Mathematical framework that prioritizes key patterns in networks aims to accelerate scientific discovery
Networks are mathematical representations to explore and understand diverse, complex systems—everything from military logistics and global finance to air traffic, social media, and the biological processes within our bodies. In each of those systems, a hierarchy of recurring, meaningful internal patterns—such as molecules and proteins interacting inside cells, and capacitors and resistors operating within integrated circuits—determines the functions or behaviors of those systems. The larger and more intricate a system is, however, the harder it is for current network modeling techniques to uncover these patterns and represent them in organized, easy-to-understand ways.
Researchers at Stanford University, funded by DARPA’s Simplifying Complexity in Scientific Discovery (SIMPLEX) program, have made progress in overcoming these challenges through a framework they have developed for identifying and clustering what mathematicians call “motifs”: essential but often obscure patterns within systems that are the building blocks of mathematical modeling and that facilitate the computational representation of complex systems.
A research paper describing the team’s achievement was published in Science ("Higher-order organization of complex networks"). At the heart of the team’s success was the creation of algorithms that can automatically explore and prioritize the hidden patterns in data that are fundamental to explaining network structure and function.
a mathematical framework that automatically identifies and prioritizes the patterns that are fundamental to explaining network structure and function
Researchers at Stanford University, funded by DARPA’s Simplifying Complexity in Scientific Discovery (SIMPLEX) program, have created a mathematical framework that automatically identifies and prioritizes the patterns that are fundamental to explaining network structure and function. As part of their research, the team analyzed the U.S. air traffic system (A) using their motif-clustering framework, which ranked airports based on network patterns, or motifs (B)—specifically, how often each airport matched the pattern of a hub. The SIMPLEX algorithms automatically detected the eight largest hubs, demonstrating that the motif-clustering representation accurately captured the hub-and-spoke design of the system (C). (click on image to enlarge)
“This approach mathematically represents complex networks more efficiently, revealing deeper functional relationships within networks and how each pattern contributes to the whole,” said Reza Ghanadan, DARPA program manager. “Additionally, it provides an analytic, systematic, and scalable way to generate hypotheses that are provably relevant to a given network based on key insights that the patterns reveal in that network. Taken together, this is an exciting demonstration of the promise that motif clustering shows for helping to unravel the complexity of diverse scientific and engineering systems, and for accelerating discovery by highlighting which avenues of research could potentially yield better results.”
As part of their research, the Stanford team tested their motif-clustering framework by applying it to several complex systems, including air traffic routes connecting the 50 most populous cities in the United States and Canada. In that example, the researchers first used conventional network modeling approaches that group cities that are connected, not cities that play similar roles in the network’s structure, such as hubs....
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