A weighted network is a network where the ties among nodes have weights assigned to them. A network is a system whose elements are somehow connected. The elements of a system are represented as nodes and the connections among interacting elements are known as ties, edges, arcs, or links. The nodes might be neurons, individuals, groups, organisations, airports, or even countries, whereas ties can take the form of friendship, communication, collaboration, alliance, flow, or trade, to name a few. In a number of real-world networks, not all ties in a network have the same capacity. In fact, ties are often associated with weights that differentiate them in terms of their strength, intensity, or capacity and Horvath. On the one hand, Mark Granovetter argued that the strength of social relationships in social networks is a function of their duration, emotional intensity, intimacy, and exchange of services. On the other, for non-social networks, weights often refer to the function performed by ties, e.g., the carbon flow between species in food webs, the number of synapses and gap junctions in neural networks, or the amount of traffic flowing along connections in transportation networks. By recording the strength of ties, a weighted network can be created. Below is an example of such a network : Weighted networks are also widely used in genomic and systems biologic applications. . For example, weighted gene co-expression network analysis is often used for constructing a weighted network among genes based on gene expression data. More generally, weighted correlation networks can be defined by soft-thresholding the pairwise correlations among variables.
Measures for weighted networks
Although weighted networks are more difficult to analyse than if ties were simply present or absent, a number of network measures has been proposed for weighted networks:
Node strength: The sum of weights attached to ties belonging to a node
The clustering coefficient : Redefined by using a triplet value or using an algebraic formula
A theoretical advantage of weighted networks is that they allow one to derive relationships among different network measures. For example, Dong and Horvath show that simple relationships among network measures can be derived in clusters of nodes in weighted networks. For weighted correlation networks, one can use the angular interpretation of correlations to provide a geometric interpretation of network theoretic concepts and to derive unexpected relationships among them Horvath and Dong