Permanental Graphs
The two components for infinite exchangeability of a sequence of distributions $(P_n)$ are (i) consistency, and (ii) finite exchangeability for each $n$. A consequence of the Aldous-Hoover theorem is that any node-exchangeable, subselection-consistent sequence of distributions that describes a rando...
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Zusammenfassung: | The two components for infinite exchangeability of a sequence of
distributions $(P_n)$ are (i) consistency, and (ii) finite exchangeability for
each $n$. A consequence of the Aldous-Hoover theorem is that any
node-exchangeable, subselection-consistent sequence of distributions that
describes a randomly evolving network yields a sequence of random graphs whose
expected number of edges grows quadratically in the number of nodes. In this
note, another notion of consistency is considered, namely, delete-and-repair
consistency; it is motivated by the sense in which infinitely exchangeable
permutations defined by the Chinese restaurant process (CRP) are consistent. A
goal is to exploit delete-and-repair consistency to obtain a nontrivial
sequence of distributions on graphs $(P_n)$ that is sparse, exchangeable, and
consistent with respect to delete-and-repair, a well known example being the
Ewens permutations \cite{tavare}. A generalization of the CRP$(\alpha)$ as a
distribution on a directed graph using the $\alpha$-weighted permanent is
presented along with the corresponding normalization constant and degree
distribution; it is dubbed the Permanental Graph Model (PGM). A negative result
is obtained: no setting of parameters in the PGM allows for a consistent
sequence $(P_n)$ in the sense of either subselection or delete-and-repair. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2009.10902 |