• Media type: Text; E-Article; Electronic Conference Proceeding
  • Title: Loosely-Stabilizing Phase Clocks and The Adaptive Majority Problem
  • Contributor: Berenbrink, Petra [Author]; Biermeier, Felix [Author]; Hahn, Christopher [Author]; Kaaser, Dominik [Author]
  • Published: Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2022
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.SAND.2022.7
  • Keywords: Loose Self-stabilization ; Phase Clocks ; Clock Synchronization ; Population Protocols ; Adaptive ; Majority
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  • Description: We present a loosely-stabilizing phase clock for population protocols. In the population model we are given a system of n identical agents which interact in a sequence of randomly chosen pairs. Our phase clock is leaderless and it requires O(log n) states. It runs forever and is, at any point of time, in a synchronous state w.h.p. When started in an arbitrary configuration, it recovers rapidly and enters a synchronous configuration within O(n log n) interactions w.h.p. Once the clock is synchronized, it stays in a synchronous configuration for at least poly(n) parallel time w.h.p. We use our clock to design a loosely-stabilizing protocol that solves the adaptive variant of the majority problem. We assume that the agents have either opinion A or B or they are undecided and agents can change their opinion at a rate of 1/n. The goal is to keep track which of the two opinions is (momentarily) the majority. We show that if the majority has a support of at least Ω(log n) agents and a sufficiently large bias is present, then the protocol converges to a correct output within O(n log n) interactions and stays in a correct configuration for poly(n) interactions, w.h.p.
  • Access State: Open Access