The paper deals with a polling game on a graph. Initially, each vertex is colored white or black. At each round, each vertex is colored by the color shared by the majority of vertices in its neighborhood, at the previous round. (All recolorings are done simultaneously.) We say that a set W 0 of vert
Dynamic monopolies in tori
β Scribed by Paola Flocchini; Elena Lodi; Fabrizio Luccio; Linda Pagli; Nicola Santoro
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 494 KB
- Volume
- 137
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0166-218X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Let G be a simple connected graph where every node is colored either black or white. Consider now the following repetitive process on G: each node recolors itself, at each local time step, with the color held by the majority of its neighbors. Depending on the initial assignment of colors to the nodes and on the deΓΏnition of majority, di erent dynamics can occur. We are interested in dynamos; i.e., initial assignments of colors which lead the system to a monochromatic conΓΏguration in a ΓΏnite number of steps. In the context of distributed computing and communication networks, this repetitive process is particularly important in that it describes the impact that a set of initial faults can have in majority-based systems (where black nodes correspond to faulty elements and white to non-faulty ones). In this paper, we study two particular forms of dynamos (irreversible and monotone) in tori, focusing on the minimum number of initial black elements needed to reach the ΓΏxed point. We derive lower and upper bounds on the size of dynamos for three types of tori, under di erent assumptions on the majority rule (simple and strong). These bounds are tight within an additive constant. The upper bounds are constructive: for each topology and each majority rule, we exhibit a dynamo of the claimed size.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This paper considers a repetitive polling game played on an n-vertex graph G. Initially, each vertex is colored black or white. At each round, each vertex (simultaneously) recolors itself by the color of the majority of its neighborhood. A set of vertices M is said to be a dynamic monopoly, abbrevia