Paper detail

Network Inference and Influence Maximization from Samples

Influence maximization is the task of selecting a small number of seed nodes in a social network to maximize the influence spread from these seeds. It has been widely investigated in the past two decades. In the canonical setting, the social network and its diffusion parameters are given as input. In this paper, we consider the more realistic sampling setting where the network is unknown and we only have a set of passively observed cascades that record the sets of activated nodes at each diffusion step. We study the task of influence maximization from these cascade samples (IMS) and present constant approximation algorithms for it under mild conditions on the seed set distribution. To achieve the optimization goal, we also provide a novel solution to the network inference problem, that is, learning diffusion parameters and the network structure from the cascade data. Compared with prior solutions, our network inference algorithms require weaker assumptions and do not rely on maximum-likelihood estimation and convex programming. Our IMS algorithms enhance the learning-and-then-optimization approach by allowing a constant approximation ratio even when the diffusion parameters are hard to learn, and we do not need any assumption related to the network structure or diffusion parameters.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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