Depth penetration and scope extension of failures in the cascading of multilayer networks
Wen-Jun Jiang, Run-Ran Liu, Chun-Xiao Jia

TL;DR
This paper investigates how failures cascade in multilayer networks with varying interdependence strengths, revealing two key failure propagation processes and how controlling interdependence can prevent sudden collapses.
Contribution
It introduces a novel decomposition of cascading failures into depth penetration and scope extension, accounting for arbitrary interdependency strengths in multilayer networks.
Findings
Failure propagation involves depth penetration and scope extension.
Percolation transition can be continuous or discontinuous.
Controlling interdependency strength can prevent abrupt collapses.
Abstract
Real-world complex systems always interact with each other, which causes these systems to collapse in an avalanche or cascading manner in the case of random failures or malicious attacks. The robustness of multilayer networks has attracted great interest, where the modeling and theoretical studies of which always rely on the concept of multilayer networks and percolation methods. A straightforward and tacit assumption is that the interdependence across network layers is strong, which means that a node will fail entirely with the removal of all links if one of its interdependent neighbours fails. However, this oversimplification cannot describe the general form of interactions across the network layers in a real-world multilayer system. In this paper, we reveal the nature of the avalanche disintegration of general multilayer networks with arbitrary interdependency strength across network…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Ecosystem dynamics and resilience
