Diagonal degree correlations vs. epidemic threshold in scale-free networks
Abstract: We prove that the presence of a diagonal assortative degree correlation, even if small, has the effect of dramatically lowering the epidemic threshold of large scale-free networks. The correlation matrix considered is $P(h|k)=(1-r)PU_{hk}+r\delta_{hk}$, where $PU$ is uncorrelated and $r$ (the Newman assortativity coefficient) can be very small. The effect is uniform in the scale exponent $\gamma$, if the network size is measured by the largest degree $n$. We also prove that it is possible to construct, via the Porto-Weber method, correlation matrices which have the same $k_{nn}$ as the $P(h|k)$ above, but very different elements and spectrum, and thus lead to different epidemic diffusion and threshold. Moreover, we study a subset of the admissible transformations of the form $P(h|k) \to P(h|k)+\Phi(h,k)$ with $\Phi(h,k)$ depending on a parameter which leave $k_{nn}$ invariant. Such transformations affect in general the epidemic threshold. We find however that this does not happen when they act between networks with constant $k_{nn}$, i.e. networks in which the average neighbor degree is independent from the degree itself (a wider class than that of strictly uncorrelated networks).
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