DocumentCode :
1912093
Title :
Noncooperative Load Balancing in the Continuum Limit of a Dense Network
Author :
Altman, Eitan ; Menache, Ishai ; Ozdaglar, Asuman
Author_Institution :
INRIA, Sophia-Antipolis
fYear :
2009
fDate :
19-25 April 2009
Firstpage :
2636
Lastpage :
2640
Abstract :
In transportation network research, the main approach for predicting traffic distribution due to noncooperative vehicle choices has been through fluid type models. The basic model considers a continuum of infinitesimal "non-atomic" vehicles, each seeking the shortest path to its destination. The resulting equilibrium turns out to be much simpler to characterize in comparison to the finite-vehicle case, yet provides a good approximation to the latter. A less familiar fluid-type model uses a continuum limit for the network topology. The limit network is a continuum plane which inherits its cost structure from the original network, and the corresponding equilibrium is identified as the continuum traffic equilibrium. This paper considers a similar equilibrium notion in a framework of a load balancing problem involving two processors, each requiring non-negligible workload (or "flow") to be handled by network resources. Besides a congestion cost at each resource (which is identical to both processors), each resource induces a processor-dependent connection cost, which is a function of its geographic location. The processors autonomously route their flow onto the different resources, with the objective of minimizing (non-cooperatively) their total cost. Assuming that the number of resources is relatively large, we apply the continuum approximation within a line (or bus) topology and study the Nash equilibria of the processor interaction. This approximation enables us to explicitly characterize the equilibrium in several cases and to obtain insights on its structure, including tight bounds on the efficiency loss due to noncooperation.
Keywords :
game theory; resource allocation; telecommunication network topology; Nash equilibria; bus topology; continuum approximation; continuum noncooperative game; continuum traffic equilibrium; dense network continuum limit; finite-vehicle; limit network; line topology; network topology; noncooperative load balancing; noncooperative vehicle choices; processor-dependent connection cost; traffic distribution prediction; transportation network; Communications Society; Cost function; Laboratories; Load management; Routing; Telecommunication network topology; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control; Transportation; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM 2009, IEEE
Conference_Location :
Rio de Janeiro
ISSN :
0743-166X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3512-8
Electronic_ISBN :
0743-166X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOM.2009.5062202
Filename :
5062202
Link To Document :
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