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Community Structures in Information Networks for a Discrete Agent Population

Communities are an important feature of social networks. The goal of this paper is to propose a mathematical model to study the community structure in social networks. For this, we consider a particular case of a social network, namely information networks. We assume that there is a population of agents who are interested in obtaining content. Agents differ in the type of content they are interested in. The goal of agents is to form communities in order to maximize their utility for obtaining and producing content. We use this model to characterize the structure of communities that emerge as a Nash equilibrium in this setting. The work presented in this paper generalizes results in the literature that were obtained for the case of a continuous agent model, to the case of a discrete agent population model. We note that a discrete agent set reflects more accurately real-life information networks, and are needed in order to get additional insights into the community structure, such as for example the connectivity (graph structure) within in a community, as well as information dissemination within a community.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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