DocumentCode :
459446
Title :
Effectiveness of Quarantine in Worm Epidemics
Author :
Chen, Thomas M. ; Jamil, Nasir
Author_Institution :
Department of Electrical Engineering, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275. Email: tchen@engr.smu.edu
Volume :
5
fYear :
2006
fDate :
38869
Firstpage :
2142
Lastpage :
2147
Abstract :
Quarantine is a natural concept borrowed from human disease control to slow down worm outbreaks. We study the effectiveness of partial quarantine for simple epidemics (without removals) and find that the optimal quarantine strategy is not as simple as expected. The strategy depends on which networks are most important to protect. We also investigate the effectiveness of quarantine for general epidemics (with removals) and derive the critical threshold for networks to have herd immunity. We show that, given a limited capability to quarantine a given number of networks, the optimal quarantine strategy is to isolate the networks small enough to have herd immunity, and then divide the remaining networks as evenly as possible.
Keywords :
Communication system traffic control; Diseases; Filtering; Humans; Immune system; Internet; Intrusion detection; Network topology; Protection; Traffic control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Communications, 2006. ICC '06. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Istanbul
ISSN :
8164-9547
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0355-3
Electronic_ISBN :
8164-9547
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICC.2006.255087
Filename :
4024482
Link To Document :
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