Neighborhood Matters: Influence Maximization in Social Networks With Limited Access

Chen Feng, Luoyi Fu, Bo Jiang, Haisong Zhang, Xinbing Wang*, Feilong Tang, Guihai Chen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Influence maximization (IM) aims at maximizing the spread of influence by offering discounts to influential users (called seeding). In many applications, due to user's privacy concern, overwhelming network scale etc., it is hard to target any user in the network as one wishes. Instead, only a small subset of users is initially accessible. Such access limitation would significantly impair the influence spread, since IM often relies on seeding high degree users, which are particularly rare in such a small subset due to the power-law structure of social networks. In this paper, we attempt to solve the limited IM in real-world scenarios by the adaptive approach with seeding and diffusion uncertainty considered. Specifically, we consider fine-grained discounts and assume users accept the discount probabilistically. The diffusion process is depicted by the independent cascade model. To overcome the access limitation, we prove the set-wise friendship paradox (FP) phenomenon that neighbors have higher degree in expectation, and propose a two-stage seeding model with the FP embedded, where neighbors are seeded. On this basis, for comparison we formulate the non-adaptive case and adaptive case, both proven to be NP-hard. In the non-adaptive case, discounts are allocated to users all at once. We show the monotonicity of influence spread w.r.t. discount allocation and design a two-stage coordinate descent framework to decide the discount allocation. In the adaptive case, users are sequentially seeded based on observations of existing seeding and diffusion results. We prove the adaptive submodularity and submodularity of the influence spread function in two stages. Then, a series of adaptive greedy algorithms are proposed with constant approximation ratio. Extensive experiments on real-world datasets show that our adaptive algorithms achieve larger influence spread than non-adaptive and other adaptive algorithms (up to a maximum of 116 percent).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2844-2859
Number of pages16
JournalIEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Volume34
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Influence maximization
  • access limitation
  • adaptive approach

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