Large Graph Mining – Patterns, Explanations, and Cascade Analysis
Christos Faloutsos, Carnegie Mellon University
Friday, February 21, 2014
11am
EBII 3211 — NCSU Centennial Campus
(Directions to Centennial campus and parking information)
This talk is part of the Taming the Data invited-speaker series, held in the Department of Computer Science at NC State University. The talk is also co-hosted by the NCSU CSC Systems Research Seminar.
Talk Title: Large Graph Mining – Patterns, Explanations, and Cascade Analysis
A video of this talk is available here.
Talk abstract:
What do graphs look like? How do they evolve over time? How does influence/news/viruses propagate, over time? We present a long list of static and temporal laws, and some recent observations on real graphs. We show that fractals and self-similarity can explain several of the observed patterns, and we conclude with cascade analysis and a surprising result on virus propagation and immunization.
About the speaker:
Christos Faloutsos is a Professor at Carnegie Mellon University. He has received the Presidential Young Investigator Award by the National Science Foundation (1989), the Research Contributions Award in ICDM 2006, the SIGKDD Innovations Award (2010), nineteen “best paper” awards (including two “test of time” awards), and four teaching awards. He is an ACM Fellow, he has served as a member of the executive committee of SIGKDD; he has published over 200 refereed articles, 11 book chapters and one monograph. He holds six patents and he has given over 35 tutorials and over 15 invited distinguished lectures. His research interests include data mining for graphs and streams, fractals, database performance, and indexing for multimedia and bio-informatics data.
This invited-speaker series has been made possible thanks to generous support from:
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