Evolving Influence Maximization in Evolving Networks
Abstract
Influence Maximization (IM) aims to maximize the number of people that become aware of a product by finding the `best' set of `seed' users to initiate the product advertisement. Unlike prior arts on static social networks containing fixed number of users, we undertake the first study of IM in more realistic evolving networks with temporally growing topology. The task of evolving IM ( EIM), however, is far more challenging over static cases in the sense that seed selection should consider its impact on future users and the probabilities that users influence one another also evolve over time. We address the challenges through EIM, a newly proposed bandit-based framework that alternates between seed nodes selection and knowledge (i.e., nodes' growing speed and evolving influences) learning during network evolution. Remarkably, EIM involves three novel components to handle the uncertainties brought by evolution:
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