The cover times of random walks on hypergraphs

  • Authors:
  • Colin Cooper;Alan Frieze;Tomasz Radzik

  • Affiliations:
  • Department of Informatics, King's College London, London, UK;Department of Mathematical Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh;Department of Informatics, King's College London, London, UK

  • Venue:
  • SIROCCO'11 Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Structural information and communication complexity
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

Random walks in graphs have been applied to various network exploration and network maintenance problems. In some applications, however, it may be more natural, and more accurate, to model the underlying network not as a graph but as a hypergraph, and solutions based on random walks require a notion of random walks in hypergraphs. At each step, a random walk on a hypergraph moves from its current position v to a random vertex in a randomly selected hyperedge containing v. We consider two definitions of cover time of a hypergraph H. If the walk sees only the vertices it moves between, then the usual definition of cover time, C(H), applies. If the walk sees the complete edge during the transition, then an alternative definition of cover time, the inform time I(H) is used. The notion of inform time models passive listening which fits the following types of situations. The particle is a rumor passing between friends, which is overheard by other friends present in the group at the same time. The particle is a message transmitted randomly from location to location by a directional transmission in an ad-hoc network, but all receivers within the transmission range can hear. In this paper we give an expression for C(H) which is tractable for many classes of hypergraphs, and calculate C(H) and I(H) exactly for random r-regular, s-uniform hypergraphs. We find that for such hypergraph whp C(H)/I(H) = Θ(s) for large s.