Order-Optimal Consensus through Randomized Path Averaging
Abstract
Gossip algorithms have recently received significant attention, mainly because they constitute simple and robust message-passing schemes for distributed information processing over networks. However for many topologies that are realistic for wireless ad-hoc and sensor networks (like grids and random geometric graphs), the standard nearest-neighbor gossip converges as slowly as flooding (O(n2) messages). A recently proposed algorithm called geographic gossip improves gossip efficiency by a n factor, by exploiting geographic information to enable multi-hop long distance communications. In this paper we prove that a variation of geographic gossip that averages along routed paths, improves efficiency by an additional n factor and is order optimal (O(n) messages) for grids and random geometric graphs. We develop a general technique (travel agency method) based on Markov chain mixing time inequalities, which can give bounds on the performance of randomized message-passing algorithms operating over various graph topologies.
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