Authors
Ayalvadi Ganesh, Laurent Massoulié, Don Towsley
Publication date
2005/3/13
Conference
Proceedings IEEE 24th Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies.
Volume
2
Pages
1455-1466
Publisher
IEEE
Description
Many network phenomena are well modeled as spreads of epidemics through a network. Prominent examples include the spread of worms and email viruses, and, more generally, faults. Many types of information dissemination can also be modeled as spreads of epidemics. In this paper we address the question of what makes an epidemic either weak or potent. More precisely, we identify topological properties of the graph that determine the persistence of epidemics. In particular, we show that if the ratio of cure to infection rates is larger than the spectral radius of the graph, then the mean epidemic lifetime is of order log n, where n is the number of nodes. Conversely, if this ratio is smaller than a generalization of the isoperimetric constant of the graph, then the mean epidemic lifetime is of order e/sup na/, for a positive constant a. We apply these results to several network topologies including the hypercube, which is …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Ganesh, L Massoulié, D Towsley - Proceedings IEEE 24th Annual Joint Conference of the …, 2005