Section: Partnerships and Cooperations
International Initiatives
Inria Associate Teams Not Involved in an Inria International Labs
MALENA
-
International Partner (Institution - Laboratory - Researcher):
-
See also: http://www-sop.inria.fr/members/Konstantin.Avratchenkov/MALENA.html
-
In the past couple of decades network science has seen an explosive growth, enough to be identified as a discipline of its own, overlapping with engineering, physics, biology, economics and social sciences. Much effort has gone into modelling, performance measures, classification of emergent features and phenomena, etc, particularly in natural and social sciences. The algorithmic side, all important to engineers, has been recognised as a thrust area (e.g., two recent Nevanlinna Prize (J. Kleinberg 2006 and D. Spielman 2010) went to prominent researchers in the area of network analytics). Still, in our opinion the area is yet to mature and has a lot of uncharted territory. This is because networks provide a highly varied landscape, each flavour demanding different considerations (e.g., sparse vs dense graphs, Erdös-Rényi vs planted partition graphs, standard graphs vs hypergraphs, etc). Even adopting existing methodologies to these novel situations is often a nontrivial exercise, not to mention many problems that cry out for entirely new algorithmic paradigms. It is in this context that we propose this project of developing algorithmic tools, drawing not only upon established as well as novel methodologies in machine learning and big data analytics, but going well beyond, e.g., into statistical physics tools.
THANES
-
International Partner (Institution - Laboratory - Researcher):
-
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) - Department of Computer and Systems Engineering (PESC/COPPE) - Daniel Ratton Figueiredo, Edmundo De Souza e Silva
-
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) - Math institute - Giulio Iacobelli
-
Purdue Univ. (USA) - Computer Science Department - Bruno Ribeiro
-
-
See also: https://team.inria.fr/thanes/
-
We plan move beyond the study of a single network and focus on multiplex networks, i.e. multiple interacting networks. Multiplex networks have recently raised as “one of the newest and hottest themes in the statistical physics of complex networks.” They originate from the observation that many complex systems, ranging from living organisms to critical infrastructures, operate through multiple layers of distinct interactions among their constituents. In particular we plan to work on the co-evolution of the different layers of a multiplex network and on how epidemics spread in such setting.
Inria International Partners
Informal International Partners
Neo has continued collaborations with researchers from GERAD, Univ. Montreal (Canada), Flinders Univ. (Australia), Univ. of South Australia (Australia), National Univ. of Rosario (Argentina), Technion - Israel Institute of Technology (Israel), Univ. of Arizona (USA), Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (USA), Univ. of Liverpool (UK), Univ. of Massachusetts at Amherst (USA), Univ. of Florence (Italy), Univ. of Palermo (Italy), Univ. of Twente (The Netherlands), Saint Petersburg State Univ. (Russia), Petrozavodsk State Univ. (Russia) and Ghent Univ. (Belgium).
Participation in Other International Programs
Indo-French Center of Applied Mathematics (IFCAM)
Neo is involved in the IFCAM with the MALENA project. See §9.4.1.1.