Prevalence and scalable control of localized networks

Author:

Duan Chao12ORCID,Nishikawa Takashi23ORCID,Motter Adilson E.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Electrical Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China

2. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

3. Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

Abstract

The ability to control network dynamics is essential for ensuring desirable functionality of many technological, biological, and social systems. Such systems often consist of a large number of network elements, and controlling large-scale networks remains challenging because the computation and communication requirements increase prohibitively fast with network size. Here, we introduce a notion ofnetwork localitythat can be exploited to make the control of networks scalable, even when the dynamics are nonlinear. We show that network locality is captured by an information metric and is almost universally observed across real and model networks. In localized networks, the optimal control actions and system responses are both shown to be necessarily concentrated in small neighborhoods induced by the information metric. This allows us to develop localized algorithms for determining network controllability and optimizing the placement of driver nodes. This also allows us to develop a localized algorithm for designing local feedback controllers that approach the performance of the corresponding best global controllers, while incurring a computational cost orders-of-magnitude lower. We validate the locality, performance, and efficiency of the algorithms in Kuramoto oscillator networks, as well as three large empirical networks: synchronization dynamics in the Eastern US power grid, epidemic spreading mediated by the global air-transportation network, and Alzheimer’s disease dynamics in a human brain network. Taken together, our results establish that large networks can be controlled with computation and communication costs comparable to those for small networks.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference58 articles.

1. M. E. Newman, A. L. Barabási, D. E. Watts, The Structure and Dynamics of Networks (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 2006).

2. Dynamical Processes on Complex Networks

3. Statistical mechanics of complex networks

4. Spontaneous synchrony in power-grid networks

5. Control of coupled oscillator networks with application to microgrid technologies

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