Noisy Rumor Spreading and Plurality Consensus
Pierre Fraigniaud, Emanuele Natale

TL;DR
This paper extends the understanding of noisy rumor spreading and plurality consensus from binary opinions to multi-valued opinions, addressing new conceptual and technical challenges in noisy communication models.
Contribution
It generalizes existing models to handle k-valued opinions, revises the notion of noise for multi-valued messages, and provides new analytical tools for probability estimation.
Findings
Characterized noise patterns solvable for plurality consensus
Generalized probability estimates for multi-valued opinions
Extended analytical proof for mode estimation in noisy channels
Abstract
Error-correcting codes are efficient methods for handling \emph{noisy} communication channels in the context of technological networks. However, such elaborate methods differ a lot from the unsophisticated way biological entities are supposed to communicate. Yet, it has been recently shown by Feinerman, Haeupler, and Korman {[}PODC 2014{]} that complex coordination tasks such as \emph{rumor spreading} and \emph{majority consensus} can plausibly be achieved in biological systems subject to noisy communication channels, where every message transferred through a channel remains intact with small probability , without using coding techniques. This result is a considerable step towards a better understanding of the way biological entities may cooperate. It has been nevertheless be established only in the case of 2-valued \emph{opinions}: rumor spreading aims at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDNA and Biological Computing · Wireless Communication Security Techniques · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks
