Author
Wilson, D
Baker, R
Woodhouse, F
Journal title
Physical Review E
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevE.97.062301
Volume
97
Last updated
2024-03-11T21:47:00.86+00:00
Page
062301-
Abstract
A random search process in a networked environment is governed by the time it takes to visit every node, termed the cover time. Often, a networked process does not proceed in isolation but competes with many instances of itself within the same environment. A key unanswered question is how to optimise this process: how many concurrent searchers can a topology support before the benefits of parallelism are outweighed by competition for space? Here, we introduce the searcher-averaged parallel cover time (APCT) to quantify these economies of scale. We show that the APCT of the networked symmetric exclusion process is optimised at a searcher density that is well predicted by the spectral gap. Furthermore, we find that non-equilibrium processes, realised through the addition of bias, can support significantly increased density optima. Our results suggest novel hybrid strategies of serial and parallel search for efficient information gathering in social interaction and biological transport networks.
Symplectic ID
853629
Favourite
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Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
04 Jun 2018
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