Abstract

Robustness of complex networks has attracted much attention in diverse disciplines. Most of previous studies did not consider the attack cost. In this paper, the network robustness is studied with the consideration of attack cost, with different complex network models and different robustness indices. It is found that with different cost function and attack budget, the best attack strategy changes. When the budget is low and attacking hubs costs much more than attacking an unimportant node, then the high-degree attack (HDA) strategy performs worse than the low-degree attack (LDA) strategy. On the contrary, HDA is always a better strategy when the budget is high. Therefore, there is an intersection before and after that different attack strategies perform better. The position of this intersection is affected by the network structure, robustness index, cost function and the budget.

Highlights

  • Large-scale infrastructure networks, such as the Internet, transportation networks, power grids play important roles in our society [1]–[3]

  • Zheng et al [14] found that, when the attack cost is taken into account, the scale-free networks may be robust against intentional attacks

  • The performance of Random attack (RA) is between high-degree attack (HDA) and low-degree attack (LDA)

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Summary

Introduction

Large-scale infrastructure networks, such as the Internet, transportation networks, power grids play important roles in our society [1]–[3]. One common method is that the attacker is supposed to remove a proportion of nodes, and the robustness is measured by the connectivity of the rest network. The intentional attack is conducted on hubs, which are supposed to be the most important nodes in the network, such as those with the highest degrees.

Results
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