Symmetries of weighted networks: weight approximation method and its application to food webs
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Graph symmetries identify structural regularities and reduce the computational complexity of network analysis. In weighted graphs, however, exact automorphisms are rare because real-valued weights seldom coincide. We introduce a general framework for detecting approximate symmetries by aggregating weights into discrete categories, generating a sequence of coarser graphs on which classical automorphism analysis applies. The approximation path is fully configurable, based on interaction magnitudes, and can be matched to the empirical weight distribution. Applied to 250 empirical food webs using logarithmic aggregation, the method reveals that automorphisms emerge even at low approximation levels and almost always form small orbits. Orbit sizes rarely exceed two or three vertices, reflecting the combinatorial fragility of larger symmetric sets. Even so, symmetric vertices occupy diverse structural positions in the network and high connectivity does not imply asymmetry. The observation of just local permutations confirms the conclusions of trophic species and niche analysis. A case study demonstrates that automorphisms can also recover latent ecological structure. The minimal aggregation level at which two vertices become substitutable provides a quantitative measure of role similarity. The framework offers a principled, automorphism-based approach for quantifying similarity and redundancy in weighted complex networks.
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