Research Publications Authored by SLIIT Staff

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This collection includes all SLIIT staff publications presented at external conferences and published in external journals. The materials are organized by faculty to facilitate easy retrieval.

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    PublicationOpen Access
    Optimisation of strategy placements for public good in complex networks
    (acm.org, 2014-08-04) Kasthurirathna, D; Nguyen, H; Piraveenan, M; Uddin, S; Senanayake, U
    Game theory has long been used to model cognitive decision making in societies. While traditional game theoretic modelling has focussed on well-mixed populations, recent research has suggested that the topological structure of social networks play an important part in the dynamic behaviour of social systems. Any agent or person playing a game employs a strategy (pure or mixed) to optimise pay-off. Previous studies have analysed how selfish agents can optimise their payoffs by choosing particular strategies within a social network model. In this paper we ask the question that, if agents were to work towards the common goal of increasing the public good (that is, the total network utility), what strategies they should adapt within the context of a heterogeneous network. We consider a number of classical and recently demonstrated game theoretic strategies, including cooperation, defection, general cooperation, Pavlov, and zero-determinant strategies, and compare them pairwise. We use the Iterative Prisoners Dilemma game simulated on scale-free networks, and use a genetic-algorithmic approach to investigate what optimal placement patterns evolve in terms of strategy. In particular, we ask the question that, given a pair of strategies are present in a network, which strategy should be adopted by the hubs (highly connected people), for the overall betterment of society (high network utility). We find that cooperation as opposed to defection, Pavlov as opposed to general cooperator, general cooperator as opposed to zero-determinant, and pavlov as opposed to zero-determinant, strategies will be adopted by the hubs, for the overall increased utility of the network. The results are interesting, since given a scenario where certain individuals are only capable of implementing certain strategies, the results give a blueprint on where they should be placed in a complex network for the overall benefit of the society.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Node assortativity in complex networks: An alternative approach
    (Elsevier, 2014-01-01) Thedchanamoorthy, G; Piraveenan, M; Kasthuriratna, D; Senanayake, U
    Assortativity quantifies the tendency of nodes being connected to similar nodes in a complex network. Degree Assortativity can be quantified as a Pearson correlation. However, it is insufficient to explain assortative or disassortative tendencies of individual nodes or links, which may be contrary to the overall tendency of the network. A number of ‘local’ assortativity measures have been proposed to address this. In this paper we define and analyse an alternative formulation for node assortativity, primarily for undirected networks. The alternative approach is justified by some inherent shortcomings of existing local measures of assortativity. Using this approach, we show that most real world scale-free networks have disassortative hubs, though we can synthesise model networks which have assortative hubs. Highlighting the relationship between assortativity of the hubs and network robustness, we show that real world networks do display assortative hubs in some instances, particularly when high robustness to targeted attacks is a necessity.