Temporal Dynamics of Scale-Free Networks

Many social, biological, and technological networks display substantial non-trivial topological features. One well-known and much studied feature of such networks is the scale-free power-law distribution of nodes’ degrees.

[1]  Duncan J. Watts,et al.  Collective dynamics of ‘small-world’ networks , 1998, Nature.

[2]  Gueorgi Kossinets,et al.  Empirical Analysis of an Evolving Social Network , 2006, Science.

[3]  Albert,et al.  Emergence of scaling in random networks , 1999, Science.

[4]  Zoltán Toroczkai,et al.  Competition-driven network dynamics: emergence of a scale-free leadership structure and collective efficiency. , 2004, Physical review letters.

[5]  Hao Wang,et al.  Tracking cohesive subgroups over time in inferred social networks , 2010, New Rev. Hypermedia Multim..

[6]  M E J Newman,et al.  Community structure in social and biological networks , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[7]  S. N. Dorogovtsev,et al.  Scaling Behaviour of Developing and Decaying Networks , 2000, cond-mat/0005050.

[8]  M E J Newman Assortative mixing in networks. , 2002, Physical review letters.

[9]  Tanya Y. Berger-Wolf,et al.  A framework for analysis of dynamic social networks , 2006, KDD '06.

[10]  A. Barabasi,et al.  Quantifying social group evolution , 2007, Nature.

[11]  H E Stanley,et al.  Classes of small-world networks. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[12]  Diego Garlaschelli,et al.  Patterns of link reciprocity in directed networks. , 2004, Physical review letters.

[13]  Albert-László Barabási,et al.  Hierarchical organization in complex networks. , 2003, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.

[14]  Mark E. J. Newman,et al.  Power-Law Distributions in Empirical Data , 2007, SIAM Rev..

[15]  B Skyrms,et al.  A dynamic model of social network formation. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[16]  Peter Donnelly,et al.  Superfamilies of Evolved and Designed Networks , 2004 .

[17]  Albert,et al.  Topology of evolving networks: local events and universality , 2000, Physical review letters.