I have been utilizing Cytoscape for a few days and find it very powerful. However, some its functionalities I am still trying to unlock. Here is a network I have graphed , but because of how dense it is - the edges are crossing over nodes they aren't connected to.
Is there any way this can be prevented? Here is an illustration of the problem I speak of.
I guess that is the only method then. Thank you.
Another method is to use hive plots, as Mikhail suggests.
As an example, I used them here to show qualitative, at-a-glance differences between classes of links separated by cell-specificity: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3679407/figure/F2/
Drawing points on a circle is probably the "optimal" solution for keeping links in a network from overlapping, but even with a circular representation, I don't think there's an easy way to get around hairballs when you're dealing with large datasets, sorry.
Though I will note that a large set of networks can be compared at a glance, so that's a nice feature. Depends on what you're trying to communicate, I guess.