A statistical physics perspective of complex networks: from the architecture of the Internet and the brain to the spreading of an epidemic Statistical physics has revealed itself as the ideal framework to describe large networks appearing in a variety of disciplines such as sociology, communication technology or neuroscience. Despite the diversity of these systems, they appear to exhibit a similar topological complexity such as the presence of small-world or scale-free patterns. The former property refers to a high global and local interconnectedness, whereas the latter means that the frequencies of the number of connections per node, i.e. the degrees, are distributed according to a decaying power law. This ubiquity at the topological level...