The Role of Gossiping for Information Dissemination over Networked Agents
Melih Bastopcu, S. Rasoul Etesami, Tamer Ba\c{s}ar

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how gossiping influences information accuracy in a network of agents, introducing new error metrics and adaptive policies to optimize dissemination under varying gossip rates.
Contribution
It develops a novel error metric, characterizes steady-state behavior, and proposes an adaptive policy for source transmission capacity to improve information accuracy.
Findings
High gossip rates lead to majority-based updates.
Gossip can be harmful when transmission capacity is limited.
Adaptive policies outperform fixed strategies in error minimization.
Abstract
We consider information dissemination over a network of gossiping agents (nodes). In this model, a source keeps the most up-to-date information about a time-varying binary state of the world, and receiver nodes want to follow the information at the source as accurately as possible. When the information at the source changes, the source first sends updates to a subset of nodes. After that, the nodes share their local information during the gossiping period to disseminate the information further. The nodes then estimate the information at the source using the majority rule at the end of the gossiping period. To analyze information dissemination, we introduce a new error metric to find the average percentage of nodes that can accurately obtain the most up-to-date information at the source. We characterize the equations necessary to obtain the steady-state distribution for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAge of Information Optimization · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Mathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models
