Title :
On the time complexity of information dissemination via linear iterative strategies
Author :
Sundaram, S. ; Hadjicostis, C.N.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Syst. Eng., Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
fDate :
June 30 2010-July 2 2010
Abstract :
Given an arbitrary network of interconnected nodes, each with an initial value, we study the number of time-steps required for some (or all) of the nodes to gather all of the initial values via a linear iterative strategy. At each time-step in this strategy, each node in the network transmits a weighted linear combination of its previous transmission and the most recent transmissions of its neighbors. We show that for almost any choice of real-valued weights in the linear iteration (i.e., for all but a set of measure zero), the number of time-steps required for any node to accumulate all of the initial values is upper-bounded by the size of the largest tree in a certain subgraph of the network; we use this fact to show that the linear iterative strategy is time-optimal for information dissemination in certain networks. In the process of deriving our results, we also obtain a characterization of the observability index for a class of linear structured systems.
Keywords :
computational complexity; interconnected systems; iterative methods; linear systems; observability; optimal control; trees (mathematics); information dissemination; initial value; interconnected nodes; largest tree; linear iterative strategy; linear structured system; observability index; subgraph; time complexity; time-optimal; weighted linear combination; Communication system control; Computer science; Control systems; Electronic mail; Information analysis; Network coding; Network topology; Observability; Size measurement; Systems engineering and theory;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2010
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7426-4
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2010.5531628