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A Space-Time Trade-off for Fast Self-Stabilizing Leader Election in Population Protocols

Published 2 May 2025 in cs.DC | (2505.01210v1)

Abstract: We consider the problem of self-stabilizing leader election in the population model by Angluin, Aspnes, Diamadi, Fischer, and Peralta (JDistComp '06). The population model is a well-established and powerful model for asynchronous, distributed computation with a large number of applications. For self-stabilizing leader election, the population of $n$ anonymous agents, interacting in uniformly random pairs, must stabilize with a single leader from any possible initial configuration. The focus of this paper is to develop time-efficient self-stabilizing protocols whilst minimizing the number of states. We present a parametrized protocol, which, for a suitable setting, achieves the asymptotically optimal time $O(\log n)$ using $2{O(n2\log n)}$ states (throughout the paper, time'' refers toparallel time'', i.e., the number of pairwise interactions divided by $n$). This is a significant improvement over the previously best protocol Sublinear-Time-SSR due to Burman, Chen, Chen, Doty, Nowak, Severson, and Xu (PODC '21), which requires $2{O(n{\log n}\log n)}$ states for the same time bound. In general, for $1\le r\le n/2$, our protocol requires $2{O(r2\log{n})}$ states and stabilizes in time $O((n\log{n})/r)$, w.h.p.; the above result is achieved for $r=\Theta(n)$. For $r=\log2n$ our protocol requires only sub-linear time using only $2{O(\log3 n)}$ states, resolving an open problem stated in that paper. Sublinear-Time-SSR requires $O(\log n\cdot n{1/(H+1)})$ time using $2{\Theta(nH) \cdot \log n}$ states for all $1\le H\le\Theta(\log n)$. Similar to previous works, it solves leader election by assigning a unique rank from $1$ through $n$ to each agent. The principal bottleneck for self-stabilizing ranking usually is to detect if there exist agents with the same rank. One of our main conceptual contributions is a novel technique for collision detection.

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