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Equilibrium and Selfish Behavior in Network Contagion

Published: February 27, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2503.00078v1

By: Yi Zhang, Sanjiv Kapoor

Potential Business Impact:

Helps stop sickness by choosing the best protection.

Business Areas:
Peer to Peer Collaboration

In this paper we consider non-atomic games in populations that are provided with a choice of preventive policies to act against a contagion spreading amongst interacting populations, be it biological organisms or connected computing devices. The spreading model of the contagion is the standard SIR model. Each participant of the population has a choice from amongst a set of precautionary policies with each policy presenting a payoff or utility, which we assume is the same within each group, the risk being the possibility of infection. The policy groups interact with each other. We also define a network model to model interactions between different population sets. The population sets reside at nodes of the network and follow policies available at that node. We define game-theoretic models and study the inefficiency of allowing for individual decision making, as opposed to centralized control. We study the computational aspects as well.

Page Count
31 pages

Category
Computer Science:
CS and Game Theory