Wikipedia principal eigenvector

A classical way to assert the relative importance of vertices in a graph is to compute the principal eigenvector of the adjacency matrix so as to assign to each vertex the values of the components of the first eigenvector as a centrality score:

On the graph of webpages and links those values are called the PageRank scores by Google.

The goal of this example is to analyze the graph of links inside wikipedia articles to rank articles by relative importance according to this eigenvector centrality.

The traditional way to compute the principal eigenvector is to use the power iteration method:

Here the computation is achieved thanks to Martinsson’s Randomized SVD algorithm implemented in scikit-learn.

The graph data is fetched from the DBpedia dumps. DBpedia is an extraction of the latent structured data of the Wikipedia content.

# Author: Olivier Grisel <olivier.grisel@ensta.org>
# License: BSD 3 clause

import os
from bz2 import BZ2File
from datetime import datetime
from pprint import pprint
from time import time
from urllib.request import urlopen

import numpy as np
from scipy import sparse

from sklearn.decomposition import randomized_svd

Download data, if not already on disk

redirects_url = "http://downloads.dbpedia.org/3.5.1/en/redirects_en.nt.bz2"
redirects_filename = redirects_url.rsplit("/", 1)[1]

page_links_url = "http://downloads.dbpedia.org/3.5.1/en/page_links_en.nt.bz2"
page_links_filename = page_links_url.rsplit("/", 1)[1]

resources = [
    (redirects_url, redirects_filename),
    (page_links_url, page_links_filename),
]

for url, filename in resources:
    if not os.path.exists(filename):
        print("Downloading data from '%s', please wait..." % url)
        opener = urlopen(url)
        with open(filename, "wb") as f:
            f.write(opener.read())
        print()

Loading the redirect files

def index(redirects, index_map, k):
    """Find the index of an article name after redirect resolution"""
    k = redirects.get(k, k)
    return index_map.setdefault(k, len(index_map))


DBPEDIA_RESOURCE_PREFIX_LEN = len("http://dbpedia.org/resource/")
SHORTNAME_SLICE = slice(DBPEDIA_RESOURCE_PREFIX_LEN + 1, -1)


def short_name(nt_uri):
    """Remove the < and > URI markers and the common URI prefix"""
    return nt_uri[SHORTNAME_SLICE]


def get_redirects(redirects_filename):
    """Parse the redirections and build a transitively closed map out of it"""
    redirects = {}
    print("Parsing the NT redirect file")
    for l, line in enumerate(BZ2File(redirects_filename)):
        split = line.split()
        if len(split) != 4:
            print("ignoring malformed line: " + line)
            continue
        redirects[short_name(split[0])] = short_name(split[2])
        if l % 1000000 == 0:
            print("[%s] line: %08d" % (datetime.now().isoformat(), l))

    # compute the transitive closure
    print("Computing the transitive closure of the redirect relation")
    for l, source in enumerate(redirects.keys()):
        transitive_target = None
        target = redirects[source]
        seen = {source}
        while True:
            transitive_target = target
            target = redirects.get(target)
            if target is None or target in seen:
                break
            seen.add(target)
        redirects[source] = transitive_target
        if l % 1000000 == 0:
            print("[%s] line: %08d" % (datetime.now().isoformat(), l))

    return redirects

Computing the Adjacency matrix

def get_adjacency_matrix(redirects_filename, page_links_filename, limit=None):
    """Extract the adjacency graph as a scipy sparse matrix

    Redirects are resolved first.

    Returns X, the scipy sparse adjacency matrix, redirects as python
    dict from article names to article names and index_map a python dict
    from article names to python int (article indexes).
    """

    print("Computing the redirect map")
    redirects = get_redirects(redirects_filename)

    print("Computing the integer index map")
    index_map = dict()
    links = list()
    for l, line in enumerate(BZ2File(page_links_filename)):
        split = line.split()
        if len(split) != 4:
            print("ignoring malformed line: " + line)
            continue
        i = index(redirects, index_map, short_name(split[0]))
        j = index(redirects, index_map, short_name(split[2]))
        links.append((i, j))
        if l % 1000000 == 0:
            print("[%s] line: %08d" % (datetime.now().isoformat(), l))

        if limit is not None and l >= limit - 1:
            break

    print("Computing the adjacency matrix")
    X = sparse.lil_matrix((len(index_map), len(index_map)), dtype=np.float32)
    for i, j in links:
        X[i, j] = 1.0
    del links
    print("Converting to CSR representation")
    X = X.tocsr()
    print("CSR conversion done")
    return X, redirects, index_map


# stop after 5M links to make it possible to work in RAM
X, redirects, index_map = get_adjacency_matrix(
    redirects_filename, page_links_filename, limit=5000000
)
names = {i: name for name, i in index_map.items()}

Computing Principal Singular Vector using Randomized SVD

print("Computing the principal singular vectors using randomized_svd")
t0 = time()
U, s, V = randomized_svd(X, 5, n_iter=3)
print("done in %0.3fs" % (time() - t0))

# print the names of the wikipedia related strongest components of the
# principal singular vector which should be similar to the highest eigenvector
print("Top wikipedia pages according to principal singular vectors")
pprint([names[i] for i in np.abs(U.T[0]).argsort()[-10:]])
pprint([names[i] for i in np.abs(V[0]).argsort()[-10:]])

Computing Centrality scores

def centrality_scores(X, alpha=0.85, max_iter=100, tol=1e-10):
    """Power iteration computation of the principal eigenvector

    This method is also known as Google PageRank and the implementation
    is based on the one from the NetworkX project (BSD licensed too)
    with copyrights by:

      Aric Hagberg <hagberg@lanl.gov>
      Dan Schult <dschult@colgate.edu>
      Pieter Swart <swart@lanl.gov>
    """
    n = X.shape[0]
    X = X.copy()
    incoming_counts = np.asarray(X.sum(axis=1)).ravel()

    print("Normalizing the graph")
    for i in incoming_counts.nonzero()[0]:
        X.data[X.indptr[i] : X.indptr[i + 1]] *= 1.0 / incoming_counts[i]
    dangle = np.asarray(np.where(np.isclose(X.sum(axis=1), 0), 1.0 / n, 0)).ravel()

    scores = np.full(n, 1.0 / n, dtype=np.float32)  # initial guess
    for i in range(max_iter):
        print("power iteration #%d" % i)
        prev_scores = scores
        scores = (
            alpha * (scores * X + np.dot(dangle, prev_scores))
            + (1 - alpha) * prev_scores.sum() / n
        )
        # check convergence: normalized l_inf norm
        scores_max = np.abs(scores).max()
        if scores_max == 0.0:
            scores_max = 1.0
        err = np.abs(scores - prev_scores).max() / scores_max
        print("error: %0.6f" % err)
        if err < n * tol:
            return scores

    return scores


print("Computing principal eigenvector score using a power iteration method")
t0 = time()
scores = centrality_scores(X, max_iter=100)
print("done in %0.3fs" % (time() - t0))
pprint([names[i] for i in np.abs(scores).argsort()[-10:]])

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