Statistical analysis of articulation points in configuration model networks
Ido Tishby, Ofer Biham, Reimer K\"uhn, Eytan Katzav

TL;DR
This paper provides an analytical study of articulation points in configuration model networks, revealing their probability, degree distribution, and a new centrality measure, with implications for network resilience and attack strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analytical framework for understanding articulation points, including a new centrality measure called articulation rank, in configuration model networks.
Findings
High degree nodes are more likely to be articulation points.
Derived probability and degree distribution of articulation points.
Analyzed articulation points in different network degree distributions.
Abstract
An articulation point (AP) in a network is a node whose deletion would split the network component on which it resides into two or more components. APs are vulnerable spots that play an important role in network collapse processes, which may result from node failures, attacks or epidemics. Therefore, the abundance and properties of APs affect the resilience of the network to these collapse scenarios. We present analytical results for the statistical properties of APs in configuration model networks. In order to quantify their abundance, we calculate the probability , that a random node, i, in a configuration model network with P(K=k), is an AP. We also obtain the conditional probability that a random node of degree k is an AP, and find that high degree nodes are more likely to be APs than low degree nodes. Using Bayes' theorem, we obtain the…
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