ACM Home Page
Please provide us with feedback. Feedback
SimRank: a measure of structural-context similarity
Full text PdfPdf (636 KB)
Source International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining archive
Proceedings of the eighth ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining table of contents
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
POSTER SESSION: Poster papers table of contents
Pages: 538 - 543  
Year of Publication: 2002
ISBN:1-58113-567-X
Authors
Glen Jeh  Stanford University
Jennifer Widom  Stanford University
Sponsors
SIGKDD: ACM Special Interest Group on Knowledge Discovery in Data
SIGMOD: ACM Special Interest Group on Management of Data
: AAAI
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 45,   Downloads (12 Months): 260,   Citation Count: 57
Additional Information:

abstract   references   cited by   index terms   collaborative colleagues  

Tools and Actions: Request Permissions Request Permissions    Review this Article  
DOI Bookmark: Use this link to bookmark this Article: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/775047.775126
What is a DOI?

ABSTRACT

The problem of measuring "similarity" of objects arises in many applications, and many domain-specific measures have been developed, e.g., matching text across documents or computing overlap among item-sets. We propose a complementary approach, applicable in any domain with object-to-object relationships, that measures similarity of the structural context in which objects occur, based on their relationships with other objects. Effectively, we compute a measure that says "two objects are similar if they are related to similar objects:" This general similarity measure, called SimRank, is based on a simple and intuitive graph-theoretic model. For a given domain, SimRank can be combined with other domain-specific similarity measures. We suggest techniques for efficient computation of SimRank scores, and provide experimental results on two application domains showing the computational feasibility and effectiveness of our approach.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
 
2
3
 
4
Glen Jeh and Jennifer Widom. SimRank: A measure of structural-context similarity. Technical report, Stanford University Database Group, 2001. http://dbpubs.stanford,edu/pub/2001-41.
 
5
6
7
 
8
Lawrence Page, Sergey Brin, Rajeev Motwani, and Terry Winograd. The PageRank citation ranking: Bringing order to the Web. Technical report, Stanford University Database Group, 1998. http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/368196.html.
 
9
 
10
Henry Small. Co-citation in the scientific literature: A new measure of the relationship between two documents. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 24:265--269, 1973.

CITED BY  58

Collaborative Colleagues:
Glen Jeh: colleagues
Jennifer Widom: colleagues