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TriMeta-BFNet: A Tri-Meta Stacked Atypical-Frequency Bayesian Fourier Neural Network for Hallucination-Resistant Community Detection

  † These authors contributed equally to this work and shared the first authorship.

Submitted:

27 May 2026

Posted:

27 May 2026

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Abstract
Dynamic community detection seeks to identify changing structural groups in temporal graphs; however, current neural methodologies are susceptible to misinterpreting transient edges, noisy temporal variations, or unusual spectral disturbances as authentic structural changes. This research introduces TriMeta-BFNet, a tri-meta stacked atypical-frequency Bayesian Fourier neural network designed for hallucination-resistant community discovery. The proposed system presents a three-dimensional meta-counterbalance mechanism that includes topological consistency, Fourier-domain atypical frequency modeling, and Bayesian posterior uncertainty estimation. Initially, temporal graph signals are converted into the Fourier domain to distinguish stable low-frequency community patterns from erratic high-frequency disturbances. Secondly, unusual frequency points are detected by spectral energy deviation and integrated into a stacked neural representation module, enabling the model to differentiate significant structural alterations from extraneous oscillations. Third, Bayesian inference is employed to assess posterior uncertainty regarding community assignments, therefore mitigating overconfident predictions in the presence of ambiguous or noisy graph evolution. The three components are simultaneously optimized via a cohesive objective function that integrates community detection loss, structural consistency regularization, atypical-frequency penalty, temporal stability management, and Bayesian calibration loss. The resultant structure offers both resilient community divisions and comprehensible hallucination-risk assessments. TriMeta-BFNet theoretically conceptualizes hallucination in dynamic community detection as an imbalance of structural, spectral, and uncertainty factors, and it develops a mathematically rigorous counterbalance mechanism to mitigate erroneous community evolution. The suggested model presents a novel approach to uncertainty-aware, frequency-sensitive, and interpretable dynamic graph learning.
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Copyright: This open access article is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, which permit the free download, distribution, and reuse, provided that the author and preprint are cited in any reuse.
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