Subgraph counting is a fundamental primitive in graph processing, with applications in social network analysis (e.g., estimating the clustering coefficient of a graph), database processing and other areas. The space complexity of subgraph counting has been studied extensively in the literature, but many natural settings are still not well understood. In this paper we revisit the subgraph (and hypergraph) counting problem in the sketching model, where the algorithm's state as it processes a stream of updates to the graph is a linear function of the stream. This model has recently received a lot of attention in the literature, and has become a standard model for solving dynamic graph streaming problems. In this paper we give a tight bound on ...
In this thesis, we explore the problem of approximating the number of elementary substructures calle...
We revisit the problem of counting the number of copies of a fixed graph in a random graph or multig...
In the subgraph counting problem, we are given a (large) input graph G(V, E) and a (small) target gr...
We present the first streaming algorithm for counting an arbitrary hypergraph $H$ of constant size i...
Detecting and counting the number of copies of certain subgraphs (also known as network motifs or gr...
Abstract. We study the subgraph counting problem in data streams. We provide the first non-trivial e...
International audienceEstimating the number of triangles in graph streams using a limited amount of ...
Many real-world phenomena are modeled by large graphs. Subgraph counting, the problem of counting oc...
Many real-world phenomena are modeled by large graphs. Subgraph counting, the problem of counting oc...
We initiate the study of graph sketching, i.e., algorithms that use a limited number of linear m...
We revisit the much-studied problem of space-efficiently estimating the number of triangles in a gra...
We study the problem of estimating the value of sums of the form S[subscript p]≜∑([x[subscript i] ...
Graph Sparsification in the Semi-Streaming Model Analyzing massive data sets has been one of the key...
For a class H of graphs, #Sub(H) is the counting problem that, given a graph H ∈ H and an arbitrary ...
Abstract—For a class C of graphs, #Sub(C) is the counting problem that, given a graph H from C and a...
In this thesis, we explore the problem of approximating the number of elementary substructures calle...
We revisit the problem of counting the number of copies of a fixed graph in a random graph or multig...
In the subgraph counting problem, we are given a (large) input graph G(V, E) and a (small) target gr...
We present the first streaming algorithm for counting an arbitrary hypergraph $H$ of constant size i...
Detecting and counting the number of copies of certain subgraphs (also known as network motifs or gr...
Abstract. We study the subgraph counting problem in data streams. We provide the first non-trivial e...
International audienceEstimating the number of triangles in graph streams using a limited amount of ...
Many real-world phenomena are modeled by large graphs. Subgraph counting, the problem of counting oc...
Many real-world phenomena are modeled by large graphs. Subgraph counting, the problem of counting oc...
We initiate the study of graph sketching, i.e., algorithms that use a limited number of linear m...
We revisit the much-studied problem of space-efficiently estimating the number of triangles in a gra...
We study the problem of estimating the value of sums of the form S[subscript p]≜∑([x[subscript i] ...
Graph Sparsification in the Semi-Streaming Model Analyzing massive data sets has been one of the key...
For a class H of graphs, #Sub(H) is the counting problem that, given a graph H ∈ H and an arbitrary ...
Abstract—For a class C of graphs, #Sub(C) is the counting problem that, given a graph H from C and a...
In this thesis, we explore the problem of approximating the number of elementary substructures calle...
We revisit the problem of counting the number of copies of a fixed graph in a random graph or multig...
In the subgraph counting problem, we are given a (large) input graph G(V, E) and a (small) target gr...