Forget him and keep on moving
Page 415
Abstract
We present a dynamic process for network evolution, aiming at explaining the emergence of the small world phenomenon. We prove that a local forgetting process combined with mobility produces shortcuts allowing navigability.
References
[1]
A. Chaintreau, P. Fraigniaud and E. Lebhar. Networks become navigable as nodes move and forget. Proceedings of ICALP 2008.
[2]
A. Chaintreau, P. Fraigniaud and E. Lebhar. Opportunistic spatial gossip over mobile social networks. Proceedings of 1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop WOSN 2008.
[3]
A. Clauset and C. Moore. How do networks become navigable? arxiv:cond-mat/0309415v2, 2003.
[4]
J. Kleinberg. The small-world phenomenon: an algorithmic perspective. Proceedings of STOC, pp. 163--170, 2000.
[5]
O. Sandberg and I. Clarke. The evolution of navigable small-world networks. arXiv:cs/0607025v1, 2007.
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- Forget him and keep on moving
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Networks Become Navigable as Nodes Move and Forget
ICALP '08: Proceedings of the 35th international colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming - Volume Part IWe propose a dynamic process for network evolution, aiming at explaining the emergence of the small world phenomenon, i.e., the statistical observation that any pair of individuals are linked by a short chain of acquaintances computable by a simple ...
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August 2008
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Published: 18 August 2008
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