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Vertex degrees in preferential attachment random graphs
Probability| Speaker: | Nathan Ross, UC Berkeley |
| Location: | 1147 MSB |
| Start time: | Wed, Oct 10 2012, 4:10PM |
Description
Preferential attachment random graphs evolve in time by
sequentially adding vertices and edges in a random way so that connections
to vertices having high degree are favored. Particular versions of these
models were used by Barabasi and Albert in 1999 to explain the so-called
power law behavior observed in the degree distribution of some real world
networks, for example the graph derived from the world wide web by
considering webpages as vertices and hyperlinks between them as edges. In
this talk we discuss recent results for some of these models which provide
rates of convergence for both the distribution of the degree of a fixed
vertex (properly scaled) to its distributional limit and the distribution
of the degree of a randomly chosen vertex to an appropriate power law. We
obtain these rates through new variations of Stein's method which rely on
showing appropriate limiting distributions are the unique fixed points of
certain distributional transformations. This point of view also provides
new descriptions and properties of some of these limiting distributions.
Joint work with Erol Pekoz and Adrian Roellin.
