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Hands-On Graph Analytics with Neo4j

You're reading from  Hands-On Graph Analytics with Neo4j

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839212611
Pages 510 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Estelle Scifo Estelle Scifo
Profile icon Estelle Scifo
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Graph Modeling with Neo4j
2. Graph Databases 3. The Cypher Query Language 4. Empowering Your Business with Pure Cypher 5. Section 2: Graph Algorithms
6. The Graph Data Science Library and Path Finding 7. Spatial Data 8. Node Importance 9. Community Detection and Similarity Measures 10. Section 3: Machine Learning on Graphs
11. Using Graph-based Features in Machine Learning 12. Predicting Relationships 13. Graph Embedding - from Graphs to Matrices 14. Section 4: Neo4j for Production
15. Using Neo4j in Your Web Application 16. Neo4j at Scale 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Path-based centrality metrics

As we discussed in the first section of this chapter (Defining importance), the neighborhood approach is not the only way to measure importance. Another approach is to use a path within the graph. In this section, we will discover two new centrality metrics: closeness and betweenness centrality.

Closeness centrality

Closeness centrality measures how close a node is, on average, to all the other nodes in the graph. It can be seen as centrality from a geometrical point of view.

Normalization

The corresponding formula is as follows:

Cn = 1 / ∑ d(n, m)

Here, m denotes all the nodes in the graph that are different from n, and d(n, m) is the distance of the shortest path between n and m.

A node that is, on average, closer to all other nodes will have a low ∑ d(n, m), resulting in high centrality.

Closeness centrality prevents us from comparing values across graphs with different numbers of nodes since graphs with more nodes will have more terms in...

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