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Introduction
Important Concepts in MCL Algorithm
MCL Algorithm
The Features of MCL Algorithm
Summary
Decompose a network into subnetworks based on some topological properties
Usually we look for dense subnetworks
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Algorithms: Exact: have proven solution quality and time
complexity Approximate: heuristics are used to make them
efficientExample algorithms: Highly connected subgraphs (HCS) Restricted neighborhood search clustering (RNSC) Molecular Complex Detection (MCODE) Markov Cluster Algorithm (MCL)
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Intuition:◦ High connected nodes could be in one cluster◦ Low connected nodes could be in different
clusters. Model:
◦ A random walk may start at any node ◦ Starting at node r, if a random walk will reach
node t with high probability, then r and t should be clustered together.
An undirected graph and its adjacency matrix representation.
An undirected graph and its adjacency list representation.
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Theorem.Theorem. Let Let MM be the adjacency matrix for be the adjacency matrix for graph graph GG. Then each (. Then each (i, ji, j) entry in ) entry in M M rr is the is the number of paths of length number of paths of length rr from vertex from vertex ii to vertex to vertex jj..
Note:Note: This is the standard power of m, This is the standard power of m, not a Boolean product.not a Boolean product.
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Graph power◦ The kth power of a graph G: a graph with the
same set of vertices as G and an edge between two vertices iff there is a path of length at most k between them
◦ The number of paths of length k between any two nodes can be calculated by raising adjacency matrix of G to the exponent k
◦ Then, G’s kth power is defined as the graph whose adjacency matrix is given by the sum of the first k powers of the adjacency matrix:
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G G2 G3
Given a weighted graph G(V,E,w), the all-pairs shortest paths problem is to find the shortest paths between all pairs of vertices vi, vj ∈ V.
A number of algorithms are known for solving this problem.
Consider the multiplication of the weighted adjacency matrix with itself - except, in this case, we replace the multiplication operation in matrix multiplication by addition, and the addition operation by minimization.
Notice that the product of weighted adjacency matrix with itself returns a matrix that contains shortest paths of length 2 between any pair of nodes.
It follows from this argument that An contains all shortest paths.
Markov process◦ The probability that a random will take an edge at
node u only depends on u and the given edge.◦ It does not depend on its previous route.◦ This assumption simplifies the computation.
Flow of network is used to approximate the partition
There is an initial amount of flow injected into each node.
At each step, a percentage of flow will goes from a node to its neighbors via the outgoing edges.
Edge Weight◦ Similarity between two nodes◦ Considered as the bandwidth or connectivity.◦ If an edge has higher weight than the other, then
more flow will be flown over the edge.◦ The amount of flow is proportional to the edge
weight.◦ If there is no edge weight, then we can assign the
same weight to all edges.
Two natural clusters
When the flow reaches the border points, it is likely to return back, than cross the border.
A B
When the flow reaches A, it has four possible outcomes.◦ Three back into the cluster, one leak out.◦ ¾ of flow will return, only ¼ leaks.
Flow will accumulate in the center of a cluster (island).
The border nodes will starve.
Simualtion of Random Flow in graph
Two Operations: Expansion and Inflation
Intrinsic relationship between MCL process result and cluster structure
Observation 1:
The number of Higher-Length paths in G is large for pairs of vertices lying in the same dense cluster
Small for pairs of vertices belonging to different clusters
Oberservation 2:
A Random Walk in G that visits a dense cluster will likely not leave the cluster until many of its vertices have been visited
nxn Adjacency matrix A.◦A(i,j) = weight on edge from i to j◦If the graph is undirected A(i,j)=A(j,i), i.e.
A is symmetric
nxn Transition matrix P.◦P is row stochastic◦P(i,j) = probability of stepping on node j
from node i = A(i,j)/∑iA(i,j)
• Flow: Transition probability from a node to another node.• Flow matrix: Matrix with the flows among all nodes; ith
column represents flows out of ith node. Each column sums to 1.
1 2 3
1 2 3
0.5 0.5
1 1
1 2 3
1 0 0.5 0
2 1.0 0 1.0
3 0 0.5 0
Flow
Matrix
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Adjacency matrix A Transition matrix P
1
1
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1
1/2
1/21
1
1/2
1/21
t=0
1
1/2
1/21
1
1/2
1/21
t=0 t=1
1
1/2
1/21
1
1/2
1/21
t=0 t=1
1
1/2
1/21
t=2
1
1/2
1/21
1
1/2
1/21
t=0 t=1
1
1/2
1/21
t=2
1
1/2
1/21
t=3
xt(i) = probability that the surfer is at node i at time t
xt+1(i) = ∑j(Probability of being at node j)*Pr(j->i) =∑jxt(j)*P(j,i)
xt+1 = xtP = xt-1*P*P= xt-2*P*P*P = …=x0 Pt
What happens when the surfer keeps walking for a long time?
Measure or Sample any of these—high-length paths, random walks and deduce the cluster structure from the behavior of the samples quantities.
Cluster structure will show itself as a peaked distribution of the quantities
A lack of cluster structure will result in a flat distribution
Markov Chain
Random Walk on Graph
Some Definitions in MCL
A Random Process with Markov Property
Markov Property: given the present state, future states are independent of the past states
At each step the process may change its state from the current state to another state, or remain in the same state, according to a certain probability distribution.
A walker takes off on some arbitrary vertex
He successively visits new vertices by selecting arbitrarily one of outgoing edges
There is not much difference between random walk and finite Markov chain.
Simple Graph
Simple graph is undirected graph in which every nonzero weight equals 1.
Associated Matrix
The associated matrix of G, denoted MG ,is defined by setting the entry (MG)pq equal to w(vp,vq)
Markov Matrix
The Markov matrix associated with a graph G is denoted by TG and is formally defined by letting its qth column be the qth column of M normalized
The associate matrix and markov matrix is actually for matrix M+I
I denotes diagonal matrix with nonzero element equals 1
Adding a loop to every vertex of the graph because for a walker it is possible that he will stay in the same place in his next step
Find Higher-Length Path
Start Point: In associated matrix that the quantity (Mk)pq has a straightforward interpretation as the number of paths of length k between vp and vq
(MG+I)2
MG
MG
Flow is easier with dense regions than across sparse boundaries,
However, in the long run, this effect disappears.
Power of matrix can be used to find higher-length path but the effect will diminish as the flow goes on.
Idea: How can we change the distribution of transition probabilities such that prefered neighbours are further favoured and less popular neighbours are demoted.
MCL Solution: raise all the entries in a given column to a certain power greater than 1 (e.g. squaring) and rescaling the column to have the sum 1 again.
Expansion Operation: power of matrix, expansion of dense region
Inflation Operation: mention aboved, elimination of unfavoured region
Expand: M := M*M
Inflate: M := M.^r (r usually 2), renormalize columns
Converged?
Input: A, Adjacency matrixInitialize M to MG, the canonical transition matrix M:= MG:= (A+I) D-1
Yes
Output clusters
No
Prune
Enhances flow to well-connected nodes as well as to new nodes.
Increases inequality in each column. “Rich get richer, poor get poorer.”
Saves memory by removing entries close to zero.
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http://www.micans.org/mcl/ani/mcl-animation.html
Find attractor: the node a is an attractor if Maa is nonzero
Find attractor system: If a is an attractor then the set of its neighbours is called an attractor system.
If there is a node who has arc connected to any node of an attractor system, the node will belong to the same cluster as that attractor system.
Attractor Set={1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10}The Attractor System is {1,2,3},{4,5,6,7},{8,9},{10}The overlapping clusters are {1,2,3,11,12,15},{4,5,6,7,13},{8,9,12,13,14,15},{10,12,13}
how many steps are requred before the algorithm converges to a idempoent matrix?
The number is typically somewhere between 10 and 100
The effect of inflation on cluster granularity
MCL stimulates random walk on graph to find cluster
Expansion promotes dense region while Inflation demotes the less favoured region
There is intrinsic relationship between MCL result and cluster structure
Scalable Graph Clustering using Stochastic Flows
The original algorithm for clustering graphs using stochastic flows.
Advantages:• Simple and elegant.• Widely used in Bioinformatics because of its noise tolerance and effectiveness.
Disadvantages:• Very slow.
- Takes 1.2 hours to cluster a 76K node social network.• Prone to output too many clusters.
- Produces 1416 clusters on a 4741 node PPI network.
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