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The Leiden algorithm is similar to the Louvain algorithm, cluster_louvain(), but it is faster and yields higher quality solutions. It can optimize both modularity and the Constant Potts Model, which does not suffer from the resolution-limit (see preprint http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.3083).

Usage

cluster_leiden(
  graph,
  objective_function = c("CPM", "modularity"),
  weights = NULL,
  resolution_parameter = 1,
  beta = 0.01,
  initial_membership = NULL,
  n_iterations = 2,
  vertex_weights = NULL
)

Arguments

graph

The input graph, only undirected graphs are supported.

objective_function

Whether to use the Constant Potts Model (CPM) or modularity. Must be either "CPM" or "modularity".

weights

The weights of the edges. It must be a positive numeric vector, NULL or NA. If it is NULL and the input graph has a ‘weight’ edge attribute, then that attribute will be used. If NULL and no such attribute is present, then the edges will have equal weights. Set this to NA if the graph was a ‘weight’ edge attribute, but you don't want to use it for community detection. A larger edge weight means a stronger connection for this function.

resolution_parameter

The resolution parameter to use. Higher resolutions lead to more smaller communities, while lower resolutions lead to fewer larger communities.

beta

Parameter affecting the randomness in the Leiden algorithm. This affects only the refinement step of the algorithm.

initial_membership

If provided, the Leiden algorithm will try to improve this provided membership. If no argument is provided, the aglorithm simply starts from the singleton partition.

n_iterations

the number of iterations to iterate the Leiden algorithm. Each iteration may improve the partition further.

vertex_weights

the vertex weights used in the Leiden algorithm. If this is not provided, it will be automatically determined on the basis of the objective_function. Please see the details of this function how to interpret the vertex weights.

Value

cluster_leiden() returns a communities()

object, please see the communities() manual page for details.

Details

The Leiden algorithm consists of three phases: (1) local moving of nodes, (2) refinement of the partition and (3) aggregation of the network based on the refined partition, using the non-refined partition to create an initial partition for the aggregate network. In the local move procedure in the Leiden algorithm, only nodes whose neighborhood has changed are visited. The refinement is done by restarting from a singleton partition within each cluster and gradually merging the subclusters. When aggregating, a single cluster may then be represented by several nodes (which are the subclusters identified in the refinement).

The Leiden algorithm provides several guarantees. The Leiden algorithm is typically iterated: the output of one iteration is used as the input for the next iteration. At each iteration all clusters are guaranteed to be connected and well-separated. After an iteration in which nothing has changed, all nodes and some parts are guaranteed to be locally optimally assigned. Finally, asymptotically, all subsets of all clusters are guaranteed to be locally optimally assigned. For more details, please see Traag, Waltman & van Eck (2019).

The objective function being optimized is

12mij(Aijγninj)δ(σi,σj)

where m is the total edge weight, Aij is the weight of edge (i,j), γ is the so-called resolution parameter, ni is the node weight of node i, σi is the cluster of node i and δ(x,y)=1 if and only if x=y and 0 otherwise. By setting ni=ki, the degree of node i, and dividing γ by 2m, you effectively obtain an expression for modularity.

Hence, the standard modularity will be optimized when you supply the degrees as vertex_weights and by supplying as a resolution parameter 12m, with m the number of edges. If you do not specify any vertex_weights, the correct vertex weights and scaling of γ is determined automatically by the objective_function argument.

References

Traag, V. A., Waltman, L., & van Eck, N. J. (2019). From Louvain to Leiden: guaranteeing well-connected communities. Scientific reports, 9(1), 5233. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-41695-z, arXiv:1810.08473v3 [cs.SI]

Author

Vincent Traag

Examples

g <- make_graph("Zachary")
# By default CPM is used
r <- quantile(strength(g))[2] / (gorder(g) - 1)
# Set seed for sake of reproducibility
set.seed(1)
ldc <- cluster_leiden(g, resolution_parameter = r)
print(ldc)
#> IGRAPH clustering leiden, groups: 2, mod: NA
#> + groups:
#>   $`1`
#>    [1]  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 20 22
#>   
#>   $`2`
#>    [1]  9 15 16 19 21 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
#>   
plot(ldc, g)