BibSonomy :: bibtex  ::

tag user group author concept BibTeX key search:all search:lysander07
A blue social bookmark and publication sharing system.
tags · relations · groups · popular
help · blog · about
login · register
lysander07's BibTeX entry:  

From the Cover: A model of Internet topology using k-shell decomposition

PNAS, 104(27): 11150-11154, 2007.
Authors: Shai Carmi and Shlomo Havlin and Scott Kirkpatrick and Yuval Shavitt and Eran Shir
URL: http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/104/27/11150
Tags: internet survey webgraph www
Abstract: We study a map of the Internet (at the autonomous systems level), by introducing and using the method of k-shell decomposition and the methods of percolation theory and fractal geometry, to find a model for the structure of the Internet. In particular, our analysis uses information on the connectivity of the network shells to separate, in a unique (no parameters) way, the Internet into three subcomponents: (i) a nucleus that is a small ({approx}100 nodes), very well connected globally distributed subgraph; (ii) a fractal subcomponent that is able to connect the bulk of the Internet without congesting the nucleus, with self-similar properties and critical exponents predicted from percolation theory; and (iii) dendrite-like structures, usually isolated nodes that are connected to the rest of the network through the nucleus only. We show that our method of decomposition is robust and provides insight into the underlying structure of the Internet and its functional consequences. Our approach of decomposing the network is general and also useful when studying other complex networks.
| URL | BibTeX  
@article{ShaiCarmi07032007,
title = {{From the Cover: A model of Internet topology using k-shell decomposition}},
author = {Shai Carmi and Shlomo Havlin and Scott Kirkpatrick and Yuval Shavitt and Eran Shir},
journal = {PNAS},
number = {27},
pages = {11150-11154},
url = {http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/104/27/11150},
volume = {104},
year = {2007},
abstract = {We study a map of the Internet (at the autonomous systems level), by introducing and using the method of k-shell decomposition and the methods of percolation theory and fractal geometry, to find a model for the structure of the Internet. In particular, our analysis uses information on the connectivity of the network shells to separate, in a unique (no parameters) way, the Internet into three subcomponents: (i) a nucleus that is a small ({approx}100 nodes), very well connected globally distributed subgraph; (ii) a fractal subcomponent that is able to connect the bulk of the Internet without congesting the nucleus, with self-similar properties and critical exponents predicted from percolation theory; and (iii) dendrite-like structures, usually isolated nodes that are connected to the rest of the network through the nucleus only. We show that our method of decomposition is robust and provides insight into the underlying structure of the Internet and its functional consequences. Our approach of decomposing the network is general and also useful when studying other complex networks. },
doi = {10.1073/pnas.0701175104}, eprint = {http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/104/27/11150.pdf},
keywords = {internet survey webgraph www }
}