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ambtis

Ambtis is a term that appears in some niche discussions of complex networks as a hypothetical measure of how far influence can spread under dual constraints. It is not a widely adopted term in mainstream theory, and references to ambtis are relatively rare outside speculative or illustrative contexts.

Etymology and usage

The name combines ambi- (“both” or “around”) with a suffix that signals a property or measure, echoing

Definition

In a two-process diffusion model on a graph, ambtis of a source node is defined as the

Properties and computation

Ambtis tends to increase with higher transmission probabilities and with more cohesive community structure, and it

Examples and relevance

In theoretical studies of competing contagions or multi-agent influence processes, ambtis can be used as a

other
science
terms
that
denote
a
characteristic
of
a
system.
In
discussions
where
ambtis
is
invoked,
it
tends
to
function
as
a
conceptual
aid
rather
than
as
a
standard,
well-defined
quantity.
maximal
graph
distance
at
which
there
remains
a
nonzero
probability
that
at
least
one
process
remains
active,
given
the
interaction
between
the
processes
(such
as
competition,
cooperation,
or
interference).
Put
differently,
ambtis
provides
a
sense
of
the
outer
boundary
of
possible
spread
when
two
signals
contend
for
influence.
The
exact
interpretation
can
vary
by
model,
but
the
idea
is
to
capture
topology
and
interaction
effects
in
a
single,
comparative
metric.
tends
to
decrease
when
cross-interference
between
the
processes
is
strong.
Computing
ambtis
typically
requires
simulation
or
solving
a
set
of
coupled
constraints,
rather
than
relying
on
a
simple
closed-form
formula,
especially
in
heterogeneous
networks.
heuristic
to
compare
networks
or
intervention
strategies.
Because
it
is
not
an
established
standard,
researchers
usually
specify
the
exact
model
and
assumptions
when
referring
to
ambtis.
See
also:
ambit,
diffusion,
competing
contagions.