30 research outputs found

    A Simple FPTAS for Counting Edge Covers

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    An edge cover of a graph is a set of edges such that every vertex has at least an adjacent edge in it. Previously, approximation algorithm for counting edge covers is only known for 3 regular graphs and it is randomized. We design a very simple deterministic fully polynomial-time approximation scheme (FPTAS) for counting the number of edge covers for any graph. Our main technique is correlation decay, which is a powerful tool to design FPTAS for counting problems. In order to get FPTAS for general graphs without degree bound, we make use of a stronger notion called computationally efficient correlation decay, which is introduced in [Li, Lu, Yin SODA 2012].Comment: To appear in SODA 201

    On the Complexity of #CSP^d

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    Counting CSP^d is the counting constraint satisfaction problem (#CSP in short) restricted to the instances where every variable occurs a multiple of d times. This paper revisits tractable structures in #CSP and gives a complexity classification theorem for #CSP^d with algebraic complex weights. The result unifies affine functions (stabilizer states in quantum information theory) and related variants such as the local affine functions, the discovery of which leads to all the recent progress on the complexity of Holant problems. The Holant is a framework that generalizes counting CSP. In the literature on Holant problems, weighted constraints are often expressed as tensors (vectors) such that projections and linear transformations help analyze the structure. This paper gives an example showing that different classes of tensors distinguished by these algebraic operations may share the same closure property under tensor product and contraction

    Clifford Gates in the Holant Framework

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    We show that the Clifford gates and stabilizer circuits in the quantum computing literature, which admit efficient classical simulation, are equivalent to affine signatures under a unitary condition. The latter is a known class of tractable functions under the Holant framework.Comment: 14 page

    The complexity of planar Boolean #CSP with complex weights

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    The Complexity of Holant Problems over Boolean Domain with Non-Negative Weights

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    Holant problem is a general framework to study the computational complexity of counting problems. We prove a complexity dichotomy theorem for Holant problems over the Boolean domain with non-negative weights. It is the first complete Holant dichotomy where constraint functions are not necessarily symmetric. Holant problems are indeed read-twice #CSPs. Intuitively, some #CSPs that are #P-hard become tractable when restricted to read-twice instances. To capture them, we introduce the Block-rank-one condition. It turns out that the condition leads to a clear separation. If a function set F satisfies the condition, then F is of affine type or product type. Otherwise (a) Holant(F) is #P-hard; or (b) every function in F is a tensor product of functions of arity at most 2; or (c) F is transformable to a product type by some real orthogonal matrix. Holographic transformations play an important role in both the hardness proof and the characterization of tractability

    A complete dichotomy for complex-valued holant<sup>c</sup>

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    Holant problems are a family of counting problems on graphs, parametrised by sets of complex-valued functions of Boolean inputs. Holant^c denotes a subfamily of those problems, where any function set considered must contain the two unary functions pinning inputs to values 0 or 1. The complexity classification of Holant problems usually takes the form of dichotomy theorems, showing that for any set of functions in the family, the problem is either #P-hard or it can be solved in polynomial time. Previous such results include a dichotomy for real-valued Holant^c and one for Holant^c with complex symmetric functions, i.e. functions which only depend on the Hamming weight of the input. Here, we derive a dichotomy theorem for Holant^c with complex-valued, not necessarily symmetric functions. The tractable cases are the complex-valued generalisations of the tractable cases of the real-valued Holant^c dichotomy. The proof uses results from quantum information theory, particularly about entanglement. This full dichotomy for Holant^c answers a question that has been open for almost a decade.</p

    Holographic Algorithms Beyond Matchgates

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    Holographic algorithms based on matchgates were introduced by Valiant. These algorithms run in polynomial-time and are intrinsically for planar problems. We introduce two new families of holographic algorithms, which work over general, i.e., not necessarily planar, graphs. The two underlying families of constraint functions are of the affine and product types. These play the role of Kasteleyn’s algorithm for counting planar perfect matchings. The new algorithms are obtained by transforming a problem to one of these two families by holographic reductions. We present a polynomial-time algorithm to decide if a given counting problem has a holographic algorithm using these constraint families. When the constraints are symmetric, we give a polynomial-time decision procedure in the size of the succinct presentation of symmetric constraint functions. This procedure shows that the recent dichotomy theorem for Holant problems with symmetric constraints is polynomial-time decidable
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