3 research outputs found
Decentralized Protection Strategies against SIS Epidemics in Networks
Defining an optimal protection strategy against viruses, spam propagation or
any other kind of contamination process is an important feature for designing
new networks and architectures. In this work, we consider decentralized optimal
protection strategies when a virus is propagating over a network through a SIS
epidemic process. We assume that each node in the network can fully protect
itself from infection at a constant cost, or the node can use recovery
software, once it is infected.
We model our system using a game theoretic framework and find pure, mixed
equilibria, and the Price of Anarchy (PoA) in several network topologies.
Further, we propose both a decentralized algorithm and an iterative procedure
to compute a pure equilibrium in the general case of a multiple communities
network. Finally, we evaluate the algorithms and give numerical illustrations
of all our results.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Control of Network
System
Learning Equilibria in Games by Stochastic Distributed Algorithms.
We consider a class of fully stochastic and fully distributed algorithms, that we prove to learn equilibria in games. Indeed, we consider a family of stochastic distributed dynamics that we prove to converge weakly (in the sense of weak convergence for probabilistic processes) towards their mean-field limit, i.e an ordinary differential equation (ODE) in the general case. We focus then on a class of stochastic dynamics where this ODE turns out to be related to multipopulation replicator dynamics. Using facts known about convergence of this ODE, we discuss the convergence of the initial stochastic dynamics: For general games, there might be non-convergence, but when convergence of the ODE holds, considered stochastic algorithms converge towards Nash equilibria. For games admitting Lyapunov functions, that we call Lyapunov games, the stochastic dynamics converge. We prove that any ordinal potential game, and hence any potential game is a Lyapunov game, with a multiaffine Lyapunov function. For Lyapunov games with a multiaffine Lyapunov function, we prove that this Lyapunov function is a super-martingale over the stochastic dynamics. This leads a way to provide bounds on their time of convergence by martingale arguments. This applies in particular for many classes of games that have been considered in literature, including several load balancing game scenarios and congestion games. 0