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Complete Graph Identification in Population Protocols

Abstract

We consider the population protocol model where indistinguishable state machines, referred to as agents, communicate in pairs. The communication graph specifies potential interactions (\ie communication) between agent pairs. This paper addresses the complete graph identification problem, requiring agents to determine if their communication graph is a clique or not. We evaluate various settings based on: (i) the fairness preserved by the adversarial scheduler -- either global fairness or weak fairness, and (ii) the knowledge provided to agents beforehand -- either the exact population size nn, a common upper bound PP on nn, or no prior information. Positively, we show that O(n2)O(n^2) states per agent suffice to solve the complete graph identification problem under global fairness without prior knowledge. With prior knowledge of nn, agents can solve the problem using only O(n)O(n) states under weak fairness. Negatively, we prove that complete graph identification remains unsolvable under weak fairness when only a common upper bound PP on the population size nn is known.

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