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- Now that we've contructed our semantic similarity network, we can use Graph Theory on this network to compute the centrality of each node using [NetworkX](https://networkx.org/). | |
- The nodes with the highest centrality will be the most important nodes (papers) in our semantic network. [Centrality Wiki](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrality) | |
- There are several types of centrality depending on the problem statement [Link](https://neo4j.com/developer/graph-data-science/centrality-graph-algorithms/). | |
- Since our goal is to find the most important papers that connect all the other papers in our corpus, we'll use [Betweenness Centrality](https://networkx.org/documentation/stable/reference/algorithms/generated/networkx.algorithms.centrality.betweenness_centrality.html#networkx.algorithms.centrality.betweenness_centrality) by default. Feel free to test out other centrality algorithms using the `Select Centrality Measure` dropdown. | |
- The plot is generated using [Plotly](https://plotly.com/python/) and is fully interactive! | |
- Bars are ordered in descending order, so the most important paper in your corpus is the top bar. | |
- Colored by the topic the paper belongs to. | |
- Hover over any bar to view the title and truncated abstract of the paper | |
- Zoom in and out by clicking and dragging over the chart. Double click to zoom out. | |
- Click on the `Download plot as png` button on the top right hand side corner to download a .png file of your plot. |