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Majority Model on Random Regular Graphs

Abstract

Consider a graph G=(V,E)G=(V,E) and an initial random coloring where each vertex vVv \in V is blue with probability PbP_b and red otherwise, independently from all other vertices. In each round, all vertices simultaneously switch their color to the most frequent color in their neighborhood and in case of a tie, a vertex keeps its current color. The main goal of the present paper is to analyze the behavior of this basic and natural process on the random dd-regular graph Gn,d\mathbb{G}_{n,d}. It is shown that for all ϵ>0\epsilon>0, Pb1/2ϵP_b \le 1/2-\epsilon results in final complete occupancy by red in O(logdlogn)\mathcal{O}(\log_d\log n) rounds with high probability, provided that dc/ϵ2d\geq c/\epsilon^2 for a suitable constant cc. Furthermore, we show that with high probability, Gn,d\mathbb{G}_{n,d} is immune; i.e., the smallest dynamic monopoly is of linear size. A dynamic monopoly is a subset of vertices that can take over in the sense that a commonly chosen initial color eventually spreads throughout the whole graph, irrespective of the colors of other vertices. This answers an open question of Peleg.

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