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The Ethereal
Centrality-Friendship Paradoxes: When Our Friends Are More Important Than Us
July 04, 2018 ยท The Ethereal ยท ๐ J. Complex Networks
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Authors
Desmond J. Higham
arXiv ID
1807.01496
Category
cs.DM: Discrete Mathematics
Cross-listed
cs.SI
Citations
34
Venue
J. Complex Networks
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
The friendship paradox states that, on average, our friends have more friends than we do. In network terms, the average degree over the nodes can never exceed the average degree over the neighbours of nodes. This effect, which is a classic example of sampling bias, has attracted much attention in the social science and network science literature, with variations and extensions of the paradox being defined, tested and interpreted. Here, we show that a version of the paradox holds rigorously for eigenvector centrality: on average, our friends are more important than us. We then consider general matrix-function centrality, including Katz centrality, and give sufficient conditions for the paradox to hold. We also discuss which results can be generalized to the cases of directed and weighted edges. In this way, we add theoretical support for a field that has largely been evolving through empirical testing.
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