On the existence of highly organized communities in networks of locally interacting agents

April 10, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on Cyber Security Cryptography and Machine Learning

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Authors V. Liagkou, P. E. Nastou, P. Spirakis, Y. C. Stamatiou arXiv ID 2304.04480 Category cs.CR: Cryptography & Security Cross-listed cs.DM Citations 0 Venue International Conference on Cyber Security Cryptography and Machine Learning Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
In this paper we investigate phenomena of spontaneous emergence or purposeful formation of highly organized structures in networks of related agents. We show that the formation of large organized structures requires exponentially large, in the size of the structures, networks. Our approach is based on Kolmogorov, or descriptional, complexity of networks viewed as finite size strings. We apply this approach to the study of the emergence or formation of simple organized, hierarchical, structures based on Sierpinski Graphs and we prove a Ramsey type theorem that bounds the number of vertices in Kolmogorov random graphs that contain Sierpinski Graphs as subgraphs. Moreover, we show that Sierpinski Graphs encompass close-knit relationships among their vertices that facilitate fast spread and learning of information when agents in their vertices are engaged in pairwise interactions modelled as two person games. Finally, we generalize our findings for any organized structure with succinct representations. Our work can be deployed, in particular, to study problems related to the security of networks by identifying conditions which enable or forbid the formation of sufficiently large insider subnetworks with malicious common goal to overtake the network or cause disruption of its operation.
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