2013 NIPS NeurIPS 2013

Near-optimal Anomaly Detection in Graphs using Lovasz Extended Scan Statistic

Abstract

The detection of anomalous activity in graphs is a statistical problem that arises in many applications, such as network surveillance, disease outbreak detection, and activity monitoring in social networks. Beyond its wide applicability, graph structured anomaly detection serves as a case study in the difficulty of balancing computational complexity with statistical power. In this work, we develop from first principles the generalized likelihood ratio test for determining if there is a well connected region of activation over the vertices in the graph in Gaussian noise. Because this test is computationally infeasible, we provide a relaxation, called the Lov\'asz extended scan statistic (LESS) that uses submodularity to approximate the intractable generalized likelihood ratio. We demonstrate a connection between LESS and maximum a-posteriori inference in Markov random fields, which provides us with a poly-time algorithm for LESS. Using electrical network theory, we are able to control type 1 error for LESS and prove conditions under which LESS is risk consistent. Finally, we consider specific graph models, the torus, $k$-nearest neighbor graphs, and $\epsilon$-random graphs. We show that on these graphs our results provide near-optimal performance by matching our results to known lower bounds.

🌉 Interdisciplinary Bridge — Computer Vision and Machine Learning and Mathematics & Optimization
📈 Trend Setter — Anomaly Detection
🧭 Keyword Pioneer — generalized likelihood ratio
🐝 Cross-Pollinator — Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science, Computer Vision, Data Science & Analytics, Deep Learning, Healthcare & Medicine, Knowledge & Reasoning, Machine Learning, Mathematics & Optimization, Reinforcement Learning, Robotics
🌱 Topic Pioneer — Graph Neural Networks
🐣 Hot Topic Early Bird — submodular optimization