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【Academic Seminar】Estimation in Preferential Attachment Networks

  • 2018.12.04
  • Event
Estimation in Preferential Attachment Networks

Title: Estimation in Preferential Attachment Networks

Speaker: Tiandong Wang, Cornell University

Time and Date: 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm, December 4, 2018

Venue: Boardroom, Dao Yuan Building

 

Abstract:

Preferential attachment is widely used to model power-law behavior of degree distributions in both directed and undirected networks. Statistical estimates of the tail exponent of the power-law degree distribution often use the Hill estimator as one of the key summary statistics, even though the consistency of the Hill estimator for network data has not been explored. We derive the asymptotic behavior of the joint degree sequences by embedding the in- and out-degrees of a fixed node into a pair of switched birth processes with immigration and then establish the convergence of the joint tail empirical measure. From these steps, the consistency of the Hill estimators is obtained.

Meanwhile, one important practical issue of the tail estimation problem is how to select a threshold above which observations follow a power-law distribution. A minimum distance selection procedure (MDSP) has been widely adopted, especially in the analyses of social networks. However, theoretical justifications on this selection procedure remain scant. We then study the asymptotic behavior of the optimal threshold and the corresponding power-law index given by the MDSP. We also find that the MDSP tends to choose too high a threshold level and leads to Hill estimates with large variances and root mean squared errors for simulated data with Pareto-like tails.

Note: This is based on joint works with S.I. Resnick (Cornell University, US), H. Drees (University of Hamburg, Germany) and A. JanBen (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden).

 

Biography:

 

Tiandong Wang currently is a fifth-year Ph.D. student in the School of Operations Research and Information Engineering (ORIE) at Cornell University, working with Prof. Sidney Resnick. She has a major in Applied Probability and Statistics, as well as two minors in Statistics and Finance. Tiandong's research mainly concentrates on applied probability and statistics, with emphasis on problems related to heavy tails and social networks.