Evolutionary Game Theory-Based Evaluation of P2P File-Sharing Systems in Heterogeneous Environments

Yusuke Matsuda Masahiro Sasabe Tetsuya Takine

In International Journal of Digital Multimedia Broadcasting, 2010

Abstract

Peer-to-Peer (P2P) file sharing is one of key technologies for achieving attractive P2P multimedia social networking. In P2P file-sharing systems, file availability is improved by cooperative users who cache and share files. Note that file caching carries costs such as storage consumption and processing load. In addition, users have different degrees of cooperativity in file caching and they are in different surrounding environments arising from the topological structure of P2P networks. With evolutionary game theory, this paper evaluates the performance of P2P file sharing systems in such heterogeneous environments. Using micro-macro dynamics, we analyze the impact of the heterogeneity of user selfishness on the file availability and system stability. Further, through simulation experiments with agent-based dynamics, we reveal how other aspects, for example, synchronization among nodes and topological structure, affect the system performance. Both analytical and simulation results show that the environmental heterogeneity contributes to the file availability and system stability.

Downloads

Text Reference

Yusuke Matsuda, Masahiro Sasabe, Tetsuya Takine, Evolutionary Game Theory-Based Evaluation of P2P File-Sharing Systems in Heterogeneous Environments, International Journal of Digital Multimedia Broadcasting, 2010, pp.1-12, March 2010.

BibTex Reference

@article{matsuda10EvolutionaryGameTheoryBased,
    author = "Matsuda, Yusuke and Sasabe, Masahiro and Takine, Tetsuya",
    title = "Evolutionary {{Game Theory-Based Evaluation}} of {{P2P File-Sharing Systems}} in {{Heterogeneous Environments}}",
    year = "2010",
    month = "March",
    journal = "International Journal of Digital Multimedia Broadcasting",
    volume = "2010",
    pages = "1--12",
    doi = "10.1155/2010/369814"
}