Search via Parallel L{e}vy Walks on ${mathbb Z}^2$


Abstract in English

Motivated by the emph{L{e}vy foraging hypothesis} -- the premise that various animal species have adapted to follow emph{L{e}vy walks} to optimize their search efficiency -- we study the parallel hitting time of L{e}vy walks on the infinite two-dimensional grid.We consider $k$ independent discrete-time L{e}vy walks, with the same exponent $alpha in(1,infty)$, that start from the same node, and analyze the number of steps until the first walk visits a given target at distance $ell$.We show that for any choice of $k$ and $ell$ from a large range, there is a unique optimal exponent $alpha_{k,ell} in (2,3)$, for which the hitting time is $tilde O(ell^2/k)$ w.h.p., while modifying the exponent by an $epsilon$ term increases the hitting time by a polynomial factor, or the walks fail to hit the target almost surely.Based on that, we propose a surprisingly simple and effective parallel search strategy, for the setting where $k$ and $ell$ are unknown:The exponent of each L{e}vy walk is just chosen independently and uniformly at random from the interval $(2,3)$.This strategy achieves optimal search time (modulo polylogarithmic factors) among all possible algorithms (even centralized ones that know $k$).Our results should be contrasted with a line of previous work showing that the exponent $alpha = 2$ is optimal for various search problems.In our setting of $k$ parallel walks, we show that the optimal exponent depends on $k$ and $ell$, and that randomizing the choice of the exponents works simultaneously for all $k$ and $ell$.

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