Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory

Social networks have become a critical part of our lives as they enable us to interact with a lot of people. These networks have become the main sources for creating, sharing and also extracting information regarding various subjects. But all this information may not be true and may contain a lot of...

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Main Authors: Minni Jain, Aman Jaswani, Ankita Mehra, Laqshay Mudgal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Internacional de La Rioja (UNIR) 2021-03-01
Series:International Journal of Interactive Multimedia and Artificial Intelligence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ijimai.org/journal/bibcite/reference/2826
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spelling doaj-03237d7cab4a43b79e9583749ce6631c2021-03-03T22:41:42ZengUniversidad Internacional de La Rioja (UNIR)International Journal of Interactive Multimedia and Artificial Intelligence1989-16601989-16602021-03-0164495610.9781/ijimai.2020.10.003ijimai.2020.10.003Rumour Source Detection Using Game TheoryMinni JainAman JaswaniAnkita MehraLaqshay MudgalSocial networks have become a critical part of our lives as they enable us to interact with a lot of people. These networks have become the main sources for creating, sharing and also extracting information regarding various subjects. But all this information may not be true and may contain a lot of unverified rumours that have the potential of spreading incorrect information to the masses, which may even lead to situations of widespread panic. Thus, it is of great importance to identify those nodes and edges that play a crucial role in a network in order to find the most influential sources of rumour spreading. Generally, the basic idea is to classify the nodes and edges in a network with the highest criticality. Most of the existing work regarding the same focuses on using simple centrality measures which focus on the individual contribution of a node in a network. Game-theoretic approaches such as Shapley Value (SV) algorithms suggest that individual marginal contribution should be measured for a given player as the weighted average marginal increase in the yield of any coalition that this player might join. For our experiment, we have played five SV-based games to find the top 10 most influential nodes on three network datasets (Enron, USAir97 and Les Misérables). We have compared our results to the ones obtained by using primitive centrality measures. Our results show that SVbased approach is better at understanding the marginal contribution, and therefore the actual influence, of each node to the entire network.https://www.ijimai.org/journal/bibcite/reference/2826gamesgame theoryrumour source detection (rsd)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Minni Jain
Aman Jaswani
Ankita Mehra
Laqshay Mudgal
spellingShingle Minni Jain
Aman Jaswani
Ankita Mehra
Laqshay Mudgal
Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
International Journal of Interactive Multimedia and Artificial Intelligence
games
game theory
rumour source detection (rsd)
author_facet Minni Jain
Aman Jaswani
Ankita Mehra
Laqshay Mudgal
author_sort Minni Jain
title Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
title_short Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
title_full Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
title_fullStr Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
title_full_unstemmed Rumour Source Detection Using Game Theory
title_sort rumour source detection using game theory
publisher Universidad Internacional de La Rioja (UNIR)
series International Journal of Interactive Multimedia and Artificial Intelligence
issn 1989-1660
1989-1660
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Social networks have become a critical part of our lives as they enable us to interact with a lot of people. These networks have become the main sources for creating, sharing and also extracting information regarding various subjects. But all this information may not be true and may contain a lot of unverified rumours that have the potential of spreading incorrect information to the masses, which may even lead to situations of widespread panic. Thus, it is of great importance to identify those nodes and edges that play a crucial role in a network in order to find the most influential sources of rumour spreading. Generally, the basic idea is to classify the nodes and edges in a network with the highest criticality. Most of the existing work regarding the same focuses on using simple centrality measures which focus on the individual contribution of a node in a network. Game-theoretic approaches such as Shapley Value (SV) algorithms suggest that individual marginal contribution should be measured for a given player as the weighted average marginal increase in the yield of any coalition that this player might join. For our experiment, we have played five SV-based games to find the top 10 most influential nodes on three network datasets (Enron, USAir97 and Les Misérables). We have compared our results to the ones obtained by using primitive centrality measures. Our results show that SVbased approach is better at understanding the marginal contribution, and therefore the actual influence, of each node to the entire network.
topic games
game theory
rumour source detection (rsd)
url https://www.ijimai.org/journal/bibcite/reference/2826
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