# Consensus ranking for multi-objective interventions in multiplex   networks

**Authors:** M\'arton P\'osfai, Niklas Braun, Brianne A. Beisner, Brenda McCowan,, Raissa M. D'Souza

arXiv: 1903.02059 · 2019-06-10

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a consensus ranking method using rank aggregation to identify influential nodes in heterogeneous multiplex networks, balancing multiple objectives for targeted interventions.

## Contribution

It develops a novel approach combining rank aggregation with Pareto optimization to handle multi-objective interventions in multiplex networks with diverse layer functions.

## Key findings

- Consensus ranking effectively balances competing layer objectives.
- Weighted aggregation reveals trade-offs in multi-objective interventions.
- Model networks demonstrate how multiplex structure influences intervention strategies.

## Abstract

High-centrality nodes have disproportionate influence on the behavior of a network; therefore controlling such nodes can efficiently steer the system to a desired state. Existing multiplex centrality measures typically rank nodes assuming the layers are qualitatively similar. Many real systems, however, are comprised of networks heterogeneous in nature, for example, social networks may have both agnostic and affiliative layers. Here, we use rank aggregation methods to identify intervention targets in multiplex networks when the structure, the dynamics, and our intervention goals are qualitatively different for each layer. Our approach is to rank the nodes separately in each layer considering their different function and desired outcome, and then we use Borda count or Kemeny aggregation to identify a consensus ranking - top nodes in the consensus ranking are expected to effectively balance the competing goals simultaneously among all layers. To demonstrate the effectiveness of consensus ranking, we apply our method to a degree-based node removal procedure such that we aim to destroy the largest component in some layers, while maintaining large-scale connectivity in others. For any multi-objective intervention, optimal targets only exist in the Pareto-sense; we, therefore, use a weighted generalization of consensus ranking to investigate the trade-off between the competing objectives. We use a collection of model and real networks to systematically investigate how this trade-off is affected by multiplex network structure. We use the copula representation of the multiplex centrality distributions to generate model multiplex networks with given rank correlations. This allows use to separately manipulate the marginal centrality distribution of each layer and the interdependence between the layers and to independently investigate the role of the two using both analytical and numerical methods.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.02059/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.02059