Abstract
Real-world networks often have power-law degrees and scale-free properties, such as ultrasmall distances and ultrafast information spreading. In this paper, we study a third universal property: three-point correlations that suppress the creation of triangles and signal the presence of hierarchy. We quantify this property in terms of c(k), the probability that two neighbors of a degree-k node are neighbors themselves. We investigate how the clustering spectrum k c(k) scales with k in the hidden-variable model and show that c(k) follows a universal curve that consists of three k ranges where c(k) remains flat, starts declining, and eventually settles on a power-law c(k)∼k-α with α depending on the power law of the degree distribution. We test these results against ten contemporary real-world networks and explain analytically why the universal curve properties only reveal themselves in large networks.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Stegehuis, C., Van Der Hofstad, R., Janssen, A. J. E. M., & Van Leeuwaarden, J. S. H. (2017). Clustering spectrum of scale-free networks. Physical Review E, 96(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.96.042309
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.