posted on 2019-07-25, 03:50authored bySrinibas Swain
Networks are used as models of complex systems in a wide variety of subjects, including chemistry, biology, sociology, engineering and computer science. We develop an interactive tool that contains more than a billion networks and related parameters. It is designed to help researchers gain insights into the structure of networks and develop new theorems about them. We also introduce and analyse the problem of finding the most commonly occurring substructure inside a network.
History
Principal supervisor
Graham Ernest Farr
Additional supervisor 1
Paul Bonnington
Additional supervisor 2
Kerri Morgan
Year of Award
2019
Department, School or Centre
Information Technology (Monash University Clayton)