A new survey on the firefighter problem

Firefighter is a discrete-time dynamic process that models the spread of a virus or rumour through a network. The name “Firefighter” arises from the initial analogy being the spread of fire among the vertices of a graph. Given a graph G, the process begins at time t = 0 when one or more vertices of...

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Main Author: Wagner, Connor
Other Authors: MacGillivray, Gary
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13360
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-133602021-09-02T17:33:58Z A new survey on the firefighter problem Wagner, Connor MacGillivray, Gary Mynhardt, Kieka Firefighter Surviving Rate Complexity Graph Theory Firefighter is a discrete-time dynamic process that models the spread of a virus or rumour through a network. The name “Firefighter” arises from the initial analogy being the spread of fire among the vertices of a graph. Given a graph G, the process begins at time t = 0 when one or more vertices of G spontaneously “catch fire”. At each subsequent time step, a collection of b ≥ 1 “firefighters” defend a set of vertices which are not burning, and then the fire spreads from each burning vertex to all of its undefended neighbours. There are many possible objectives one could have, for example minimizing the expected number of vertices burned when the fire breaks out at a random location or locations, finding the maximum number of vertices that can be saved from burning if the fire breaks out at known locations, minimizing the length of the process, or bounding the proportion of vertices that can be saved from burning. It is also possible to consider multiple objectives that may be in conflict. There are a great number of papers in the literature which address these, and other, issues in terms of computational complexity, algorithms, approximation, asymptotics, heuristics, and more. The main purpose of this thesis is to survey developments on Firefighter and its variants which have appeared in the literature subsequent to a previous survey that appeared in 2009 [S. Finbow and G. MacGillivray. The firefighter problem: A survey of results, directions and questions. Australas. J. Comb., 43, 2009]. The thesis concludes with a list of open problems and future directions from the previous survey, annotated with references for papers that have made progress on those topics since then. Graduate 2021-09-01T19:35:46Z 2021-09-01T19:35:46Z 2021 2021-09-01 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13360 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Firefighter
Surviving Rate
Complexity
Graph Theory
spellingShingle Firefighter
Surviving Rate
Complexity
Graph Theory
Wagner, Connor
A new survey on the firefighter problem
description Firefighter is a discrete-time dynamic process that models the spread of a virus or rumour through a network. The name “Firefighter” arises from the initial analogy being the spread of fire among the vertices of a graph. Given a graph G, the process begins at time t = 0 when one or more vertices of G spontaneously “catch fire”. At each subsequent time step, a collection of b ≥ 1 “firefighters” defend a set of vertices which are not burning, and then the fire spreads from each burning vertex to all of its undefended neighbours. There are many possible objectives one could have, for example minimizing the expected number of vertices burned when the fire breaks out at a random location or locations, finding the maximum number of vertices that can be saved from burning if the fire breaks out at known locations, minimizing the length of the process, or bounding the proportion of vertices that can be saved from burning. It is also possible to consider multiple objectives that may be in conflict. There are a great number of papers in the literature which address these, and other, issues in terms of computational complexity, algorithms, approximation, asymptotics, heuristics, and more. The main purpose of this thesis is to survey developments on Firefighter and its variants which have appeared in the literature subsequent to a previous survey that appeared in 2009 [S. Finbow and G. MacGillivray. The firefighter problem: A survey of results, directions and questions. Australas. J. Comb., 43, 2009]. The thesis concludes with a list of open problems and future directions from the previous survey, annotated with references for papers that have made progress on those topics since then. === Graduate
author2 MacGillivray, Gary
author_facet MacGillivray, Gary
Wagner, Connor
author Wagner, Connor
author_sort Wagner, Connor
title A new survey on the firefighter problem
title_short A new survey on the firefighter problem
title_full A new survey on the firefighter problem
title_fullStr A new survey on the firefighter problem
title_full_unstemmed A new survey on the firefighter problem
title_sort new survey on the firefighter problem
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13360
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