4.5 Article

Epidemic Spreading With External Agents

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY
Volume 60, Issue 7, Pages 4125-4138

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIT.2014.2316801

Keywords

Epidemic spreading; infection/information dissemination; long-range spreading; percolation; mobility

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CNS-1320175, CNS-1017525, CNS-0721380]
  2. Army Research Office [W911NF-11-1-0265]

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We study epidemic spreading processes in large networks, when the spread is assisted by a small number of external agents: infection sources with bounded spreading power, but whose movement is unrestricted vis-a-vis the underlying network topology. For networks, which are spatially constrained, we show that the spread of infection can be significantly speeded up even by a few such external agents infecting randomly. Moreover, for general networks, we derive upper bounds on the order of the spreading time achieved by certain simple (random/greedy) external-spreading policies. Conversely, for certain common classes of networks such as line graphs, grids, and random geometric graphs, we also derive lower bounds on the order of the spreading time over all (potentially network-state aware and adversarial) external-spreading policies; these adversarial lower bounds match (up to logarithmic factors) the spreading time achieved by an external agent with a random spreading policy. This demonstrates that random, state-oblivious infection-spreading by an external agent is in fact order-wise optimal for spreading in such spatially constrained networks.

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