Applied Network Science (Aug 2019)

Semi-supervised graph labelling reveals increasing partisanship in the United States Congress

  • Max Glonek,
  • Jonathan Tuke,
  • Lewis Mitchell,
  • Nigel Bean

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41109-019-0185-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Graph labelling is a key activity of network science, with broad practical applications, and close relations to other network science tasks, such as community detection and clustering. While a large body of work exists on both unsupervised and supervised labelling algorithms, the class of random walk-based supervised algorithms requires further exploration, particularly given their relevance to social and political networks. This work refines and expands upon a new semi-supervised graph labelling method, the GLaSS method, that exactly calculates absorption probabilities for random walks on connected graphs. The method models graphs exactly as discrete-time Markov chains, treating labelled nodes as absorbing states. The method is applied to roll call voting data for 42 meetings of the United States House of Representatives and Senate, from 1935 to 2019. Analysis of the 84 resultant political networks demonstrates strong and consistent performance of GLaSS when estimating labels for unlabelled nodes in graphs, and reveals a significant trend of increasing partisanship within the United States Congress.

Keywords