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Degree-penalized contact processes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2026

Zsolt Bartha
Affiliation:
Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics , Hungary; E-mail: bartha@renyi.hu
Júlia Komjáthy
Affiliation:
Delft University of Technology , Netherlands; E-mail: j.komjathy@tudelft.nl
Daniel Valesin*
Affiliation:
University of Warwick , UK
*
E-mail: daniel.valesin@warwick.ac.uk (Corresponding author)

Abstract

In this paper we study degree-penalized contact processes on Galton-Watson (GW) trees and the configuration model. The model we consider is a modification of the usual contact process on a graph. In particular, each vertex can be either infected or healthy. When infected, each vertex heals at rate one. Also, when infected, a vertex u with degree $d_u$ infects its neighboring vertex v with degree $d_v$ with rate $\lambda / f(d_u, d_v)$ for some positive function f. In the case $f(d_u, d_v)=\max (d_u, d_v)^\mu $ for some $\mu \ge 0$, the infection is slowed down to and from high-degree vertices. This is in line with arguments used in social network science: people with many contacts do not have the time to infect their neighbors at the same rate as people with fewer contacts.

We show that new phase transitions occur in terms of the parameter $\mu $ (at $1/2$) and the degree distribution D of the GW tree.

  • When $\mu \ge 1$, the process goes extinct for all distributions D for all sufficiently small $\lambda>0$;

  • When $\mu \in [1/2, 1)$, and the tail of D weakly follows a power law with tail-exponent less than $1-\mu $, the process survives globally but not locally for all $\lambda $ small enough;

  • When $\mu \in [1/2, 1)$, and $\mathbb {E}[D^{1-\mu }]<\infty $, the process goes extinct almost surely, for all $\lambda $ small enough;

  • When $\mu <1/2$, and D is heavier than stretched exponential with stretch-exponent $1-2\mu $, the process survives (locally) with positive probability for all $\lambda>0$.

We also study the product case, where $f(d_u,d_v)=(d_u d_v)^\mu $. In that case, the situation for $\mu < 1/2$ is the same as the one described above, but $\mu \ge 1/2$ always leads to a subcritical contact process for small enough $\lambda>0$ on all graphs. Furthermore, for finite random graphs with prescribed degree sequences, we establish the corresponding phase transitions in terms of the length of survival.

Information

Type
Probability
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2026. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Table 1 Summary of our main results: phases of degree-dependent contact process. Let $u, v$ be two vertices with degrees $d_u, d_v$, respectively, connected by and edge. Then the infection rate across the edge $(u,v)$ is $\lambda /f(d_u,d_v)=\lambda / (d_u d_v)^\mu $ in the case of the product penalty, and $\lambda /f(d_u,d_v)=\lambda /\max \{d_u, d_v\}^\mu $ in the case of the max penalty. The second column shows the phases when the underlying graph is a Galton-Watson tree with offspring distribution D, and initially only the root is infected. Here, $\alpha $ denotes the power-law tail-exponent, that is, $\mathbb {P}(D\ge z)\asymp z^{-\alpha }$. The third column shows the phases when the underlying graph is a configuration model with degree sequence $\underline {d}_n$, and initially all the vertices are infected. Here, $\tau $ denotes the exponent of the limiting mass function, that is, $\mathbb {P}(D\ge z)\asymp z^{-(\tau -1)}$. We allow not just pure power laws, see Definitions 1.7–1.8 and Assumptions 1.10–1.12 for weaker assumptions. Some technical conditions are omitted in the table. For $\mu \in [1/2, 1) $ on the configuration model, fast extinction occurs when $\tau>3$, including any other lighter tails, not just power laws.

Figure 1

Figure 1 Illustration of the loop erasure technique: two potential infection paths $\pi ^{(1)}$ (left) and $\pi ^{(2)}$ (right) both lead to the same rectified path $\pi $ (middle). The figure also shows the definition of $\tau $ and g in Definition 4.2.

Figure 2

Figure 2 The graph $H_{K,\ell (K)}$.

Figure 3

Figure 3 This example shows a finite oriented cluster of the origin $\mathcal {C}_{(1,1)}$: filled black circles are vertices in $\mathcal {C}_{(1,1)}$ while empty black circles are vertices that do not belong to $\mathcal {C}_{(1,1)}$. The oriented, black edges are open in $\mathcal {H}$, while the closed edges of $\mathcal {H}$ are not drawn. The red contour and red vertices belong to the dual lattice $\mathcal {H}'$. Since $Y_{\text {max}}=5$, the dual contour $\pi _\partial $ starts from $(1,6)$, and follows the closed dual edges colored red, ending at $(2,1)$. Edges of $\mathcal {H}$ pointing out of $\mathcal {C}_{(1,1)}$ are all closed (not drawn), whereas edges pointing into $\mathcal {C}_{(1,1)}$ may be open – such as the edge $((5,3),(4,4))$ – or closed.