Timeliness Through Telephones: Approximating Information Freshness in Vector Clock Models
Da Qi Chen, Lin An, Aidin Niaparast, R. Ravi, Oleksandr Rudenko

TL;DR
This paper studies how to efficiently disseminate updated information from a root node to all nodes in a network using telephone call models, introducing approximation algorithms for minimizing information latency.
Contribution
It introduces a novel connection between average rooted latency and broadcast time, providing approximation algorithms including a 40-approximation for trees.
Findings
Logarithmic approximation for average latency via broadcast time
Constant-factor approximation for schedules in trees
Reduction from latency minimization to broadcast time problem
Abstract
We consider an information dissemination problem where the root of an undirected graph constantly updates its information. The goal is to keep every other node in the graph about the root as freshly informed as possible. Our synchronous information spreading model uses telephone calls at each time step, in which any node can call at most one neighbor, thus forming a matching over which information is transmitted at each step. We introduce two problems in minimizing two natural objectives (Maximum and Average) of the latency of the root's information at all nodes in the network. After deriving a simple reduction from the maximum rooted latency problem to the well-studied minimum broadcast time problem, we focus on the average rooted latency version. We introduce a natural problem of finding a finite schedule that minimizes the average broadcast time from a root. We show that any…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Distributed systems and fault tolerance · Caching and Content Delivery
