Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1872419 Physics Procedia 2011 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

We study a simple model involving adaptive networks in which the nodes add or cut links to other nodes according to a set preferred degree,k This behavior seems more natural for human beings as they form a circle of a preferred number of friends or contacts. In the simplest model, a node with degree k will add (cut) a link with probability w+ (k) (1– w+ (k)). Several forms of w+ are considered, e.g., a step function that drops abruptly from unity to zero as k increases beyond k. Using simulations, we find the degree distribution in the steady state. Unexpectedly, it is not a Gaussian (around k). We are able to find an approximate theory which explains these distributions quite well. Introducing a second network and coupling the two in various ways, we find both understandable and puzzling features. In the third part, we consider overlaying an SIS model of epidemics on a single adaptive network, allowing k to depend on the fraction of the infected population. The gross features of the resulting steady states can be well explained by a mean field like theory, balancing the rates of recovery and infection. Various avenues for further investigations are proposed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)