Phys. Rev. E 71, 016127 (2005) [10 pages]Coarse-graining and self-dissimilarity of complex networksReceived 13 May 2004; revised 21 July 2004; published 21 January 2005 Can complex engineered and biological networks be coarse-grained into smaller and more understandable versions in which each node represents an entire pattern in the original network? To address this, we define coarse-graining units as connectivity patterns which can serve as the nodes of a coarse-grained network and present algorithms to detect them. We use this approach to systematically reverse-engineer electronic circuits, forming understandable high-level maps from incomprehensible transistor wiring: first, a coarse-grained version in which each node is a gate made of several transistors is established. Then the coarse-grained network is itself coarse-grained, resulting in a high-level blueprint in which each node is a circuit module made of many gates. We apply our approach also to a mammalian protein signal-transduction network, to find a simplified coarse-grained network with three main signaling channels that resemble multi-layered perceptrons made of cross-interacting MAP-kinase cascades. We find that both biological and electronic networks are “self-dissimilar,” with different network motifs at each level. The present approach may be used to simplify a variety of directed and nondirected, natural and designed networks. © 2005 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.71.016127
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.71.016127
PACS:
89.75.Fb
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