Graph explorer

Infectious Random Walks

We study the dynamics of information (or virus) dissemination by $m$ mobile agents performing independent random walks on an $n$-node grid. We formulate our results in terms of two scenarios: broadcasting and gossiping. In the broadcasting scenario, the mobile agents are initially placed uniformly at random among the grid nodes. At time 0, one agent is informed of a rumor and starts a random walk. When an informed agent meets an uninformed agent, the latter becomes informed and starts a new random walk. We study the broadcasting time of the system, that is, the time it takes for all agents to know the rumor. In the gossiping scenario, each agent is given a distinct rumor at time 0 and all agents start random walks. When two agents meet, they share all rumors they are aware of. We study the gossiping time of the system, that is, the time it takes for all agents to know all rumors. We prove that both the broadcasting and the gossiping times are $\tildeΘ(n/\sqrt{m})$ w.h.p., thus achieving a tight characterization up to logarithmic factors. Previous results for the grid provided bounds which were weaker and only concerned average times. In the context of virus infection, a corollary o

7 nodes6 linksoverview previewInfectious Random Walks
7 nodes6 links
Infectious Random Walks7 visible / 7 total nodes / 12 links
Co-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipTopic signalTopic signalWInfectious Random Walkspreprint / 2011AAlberto PettarinResearcherAAndrea PietracaprinaResearcherAGeppino PucciResearcherAEli UpfalResearcherTData Structures and Alg...3564 worksTDiscrete Mathematics1775 works
PaperSignal 106 links

Infectious Random Walks

preprint / 2011

Open