Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
This has been a computer scientists revolution; but we all share in its results. Only a few years ago, the World Wide Web was known just to a small research community; it is hard to remember that the voluminous content we see on the WWW, expanding by an estimated million pages each day, has grown up around us in so short a time. Researchers now release their results to the Web before they appear in print; corporations list their URLs alongside their toll-free numbers; news media and entertainment companies vie for the attention of a browsing audience. The Web has become the most visible manifestation of a new medium: a global, populist hypertext. The speed with which this medium has emerged is a testament to the universality of the computational models on which it is built; much of the software and network infrastructure supporting the Web was developed long before there was a Web to support. In much the same way, when we investigate the structural properties of the WWW, we may make use of well-studied models of discrete mathematics-- the combinatorial and algebraic properties of graphs. The Web can be naturally modeled as a directed graph, consisting of a set of abstract nodes (the pages) joined by directional edges (the hyperlinks). Hyperlinks encode a considerable amount of latent information about the the underlying collection of pages; thus, the structure of this directed graph can provide us with significant insight into its content. Within this framework, we can search for signs of meaningful graph-theoretic structure; we can ask: What are the recurring patterns of linkage that occur across the Web as a whole?
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jon Kleinberg
Northwestern University
ACM Computing Surveys
Cornell University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jon Kleinberg (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0dad7d48a82a5ce309ceb1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/345966.345982