DocumentCode
3345480
Title
Which Distributed Averaging Algorithm Should I Choose for my Sensor Network?
Author
Denantes, P. ; Benezit, F. ; Thiran, Patrick ; Vetterli, Martin
Author_Institution
Sch. of IC, EPFL, Lausanne
fYear
2008
fDate
13-18 April 2008
Abstract
Average consensus and gossip algorithms have recently received significant attention, mainly because they constitute simple and robust algorithms for distributed information processing over networks. Inspired by heat diffusion, they compute the average of sensor networks measurements by iterating local averages until a desired level of convergence. Confronted with the diversity of these algorithms, the engineer may be puzzled in his choice for one of them. As an answer to his/her need, we develop precise mathematical metrics, easy to use in practice, to characterize the convergence speed and the cost (time, message passing, energy...) of each of the algorithms. In contrast to other works focusing on time-invariant scenarios, we evaluate these metrics for ergodic time-varying networks. Our study is based on Oseledec´s theorem, which gives an almost- sure description of the convergence speed of the algorithms of interest. We further provide upper bounds on the convergence speed. Finally, we use these tools to make some experimental observations illustrating the behavior of the convergence speed with respect to network topology and reliability in both average consensus and gossip algorithms.
Keywords
distributed algorithms; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network topology; time-varying networks; wireless sensor networks; average consensus algorithm; distributed averaging algorithm; distributed information processing; ergodic time-varying network; gossip algorithm; network reliability; network topology; wireless sensor network; Computer networks; Convergence; Costs; Information processing; Message passing; Network topology; Power engineering and energy; Robustness; Thermal sensors; Upper bound;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM 2008. The 27th Conference on Computer Communications. IEEE
Conference_Location
Phoenix, AZ
ISSN
0743-166X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2025-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFOCOM.2008.152
Filename
4509747
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