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arxiv: 0711.3915 · v2 · submitted 2007-11-25 · 💻 cs.IT · cs.MA· math.IT· math.OC

Distributed Consensus Algorithms in Sensor Networks: Link Failures and Channel Noise

classification 💻 cs.IT cs.MAmath.ITmath.OC
keywords consensusmathcala-ndaverageweightsalgorithmbiasconvergence
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The paper studies average consensus with random topologies (intermittent links) \emph{and} noisy channels. Consensus with noise in the network links leads to the bias-variance dilemma--running consensus for long reduces the bias of the final average estimate but increases its variance. We present two different compromises to this tradeoff: the $\mathcal{A-ND}$ algorithm modifies conventional consensus by forcing the weights to satisfy a \emph{persistence} condition (slowly decaying to zero); and the $\mathcal{A-NC}$ algorithm where the weights are constant but consensus is run for a fixed number of iterations $\hat{\imath}$, then it is restarted and rerun for a total of $\hat{p}$ runs, and at the end averages the final states of the $\hat{p}$ runs (Monte Carlo averaging). We use controlled Markov processes and stochastic approximation arguments to prove almost sure convergence of $\mathcal{A-ND}$ to the desired average (asymptotic unbiasedness) and compute explicitly the m.s.e. (variance) of the consensus limit. We show that $\mathcal{A-ND}$ represents the best of both worlds--low bias and low variance--at the cost of a slow convergence rate; rescaling the weights...

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