The mixing time of a random walk, with or without backtracking, on a random graph generated according to the configuration model on n vertices, is known to be of order log n. In this paper, we investigate what happens when the random graph becomes dynamic, namely, at each unit of time a fraction αn of the edges is randomly rewired. Under mild conditions on the degree sequence, guaranteeing that the graph is locally tree-like, we show that for every ε ∈ (0, 1) the ε-mixing time of random walk without backtracking grows like 2 log(1/ε)/log(1/(1 − αn)) as n → ∞, provided that limn→∞ αn(log n)2 = ∞. The latter condition corresponds to a regime of fast enough graph dynamics. Our proof is based on a randomised stopping time argument, in combinati...
A random walk is a basic stochastic process on graphs and a key primitive in the design of distribut...
Suppose that G is a finite, connected graph and X is a lazy random walk on G . The lamplighter chain...
We study the mixing time of random walks on small-world networks modelled as follows: starting with ...
The mixing time of a random walk, with or without backtracking, on a random graph generated accordin...
The mixing time of a random walk, with or without backtracking, on a random graph generated accordin...
This paper considers non-backtracking random walks on random graphs generated according to the confi...
We consider a dynamic random graph on n vertices that is obtained by starting from a random graph ge...
We consider a dynamic random graph on n vertices that is obtained by starting from a random graph ge...
In this paper, which is a culmination of our previous research efforts, we provide a general framewo...
We establish and generalise several bounds for various random walk quantities including the mixing t...
The theory of rapid mixing random walks plays a fundamental role in the study of modern randomised a...
We study the mixing time of a random walker who moves inside a dynamical random cluster model on the...
Presented on September 21, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. in the Klaus Advanced Computing Building, room 1116W.A...
We consider dynamical percolation on the complete graph Kn, where each edge refreshes its state at r...
A geometric random graph, G d (n, r), is formed as follows: place n nodes uniformly at random onto t...
A random walk is a basic stochastic process on graphs and a key primitive in the design of distribut...
Suppose that G is a finite, connected graph and X is a lazy random walk on G . The lamplighter chain...
We study the mixing time of random walks on small-world networks modelled as follows: starting with ...
The mixing time of a random walk, with or without backtracking, on a random graph generated accordin...
The mixing time of a random walk, with or without backtracking, on a random graph generated accordin...
This paper considers non-backtracking random walks on random graphs generated according to the confi...
We consider a dynamic random graph on n vertices that is obtained by starting from a random graph ge...
We consider a dynamic random graph on n vertices that is obtained by starting from a random graph ge...
In this paper, which is a culmination of our previous research efforts, we provide a general framewo...
We establish and generalise several bounds for various random walk quantities including the mixing t...
The theory of rapid mixing random walks plays a fundamental role in the study of modern randomised a...
We study the mixing time of a random walker who moves inside a dynamical random cluster model on the...
Presented on September 21, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. in the Klaus Advanced Computing Building, room 1116W.A...
We consider dynamical percolation on the complete graph Kn, where each edge refreshes its state at r...
A geometric random graph, G d (n, r), is formed as follows: place n nodes uniformly at random onto t...
A random walk is a basic stochastic process on graphs and a key primitive in the design of distribut...
Suppose that G is a finite, connected graph and X is a lazy random walk on G . The lamplighter chain...
We study the mixing time of random walks on small-world networks modelled as follows: starting with ...