Euclidean Mirrors for discovering dynamics in network time series: Where & How to Find Them

Carey Priebe Speaker
Johns Hopkins University
 
Wednesday, Aug 6: 8:35 AM - 8:55 AM
Invited Paper Session 
Music City Center 
We describe a model for a network time series whose evolution is governed by an underlying stochastic process, known as the latent position process, in which network evolution can be represented in Euclidean space by a curve, called the Euclidean mirror. We define the notion of a first-order changepoint for a time series of networks, and construct a family of latent position process networks with underlying first-order changepoints. We prove that a spectral estimate of the associated Euclidean mirror localizes these changepoints, even when the graph distribution evolves continuously, but at a rate that changes. Simulated and real data examples on organoid networks show that this localization captures empirically significant shifts in network evolution.

Keywords

dynamic network

changepoint

spectral

organoid