Adjustable reach in a network centrality based on current flows
Aleks J. Gurfinkel, Per Arne Rikvold

TL;DR
This paper introduces the ground-current centrality, a novel network centrality measure that combines reach parametrization with acyclic, conservative influence flows, offering improved robustness and interpretability over existing measures.
Contribution
It classifies parametrized centralities, identifies a gap in existing measures, and proposes the ground-current centrality with advantages in simplicity and distribution consistency.
Findings
Ground-current centrality has a simpler mathematical form.
It maintains consistent rank ordering across various networks.
It avoids trivial delocalization and localization behaviors.
Abstract
Centrality, which quantifies the "importance" of individual nodes, is among the most essential concepts in modern network theory. Most prominent centrality measures can be expressed as an aggregation of influence flows between pairs of nodes. As there are many ways in which influence can be defined, many different centrality measures are in use. Parametrized centralities allow further flexibility and utility by tuning the centrality calculation to the regime most appropriate for a given network. Here, we identify two categories of centrality parameters. Reach parameters control the attenuation of influence flows between distant nodes. Grasp parameters control the centrality's potential to send influence flows along multiple, often nongeodesic paths. Combining these categories with Borgatti's centrality types [S. P. Borgatti, Social Networks 27, 55-71 (2005)], we arrive at a novel…
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