2 research outputs found

    A join-based hybrid parameter for constraint satisfaction

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    We propose joinwidth, a new complexity parameter for the Constraint Satisfaction Problem (CSP). The definition of joinwidth is based on the arrangement of basic operations on relations (joins, projections, and pruning), which inherently reflects the steps required to solve the instance. We use joinwidth to obtain polynomial-time algorithms (if a corresponding decomposition is provided in the input) as well as fixed-parameter algorithms (if no such decomposition is provided) for solving the CSP. Joinwidth is a hybrid parameter, as it takes both the graphical structure as well as the constraint relations that appear in the instance into account. It has, therefore, the potential to capture larger classes of tractable instances than purely structural parameters like hypertree width and the more general fractional hypertree width (fhtw). Indeed, we show that any class of instances of bounded fhtw also has bounded joinwidth, and that there exist classes of instances of bounded joinwidth and unbounded fhtw, so bounded joinwidth properly generalizes bounded fhtw. We further show that bounded joinwidth also properly generalizes several other known hybrid restrictions, such as fhtw with degree constraints and functional dependencies. In this sense, bounded joinwidth can be seen as a unifying principle that explains the tractability of several seemingly unrelated classes of CSP instances

    Semantic Width and the Fixed-Parameter Tractability of Constraint Satisfaction Problems

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    Constraint satisfaction problems (CSPs) are an important formal framework for the uniform treatment of various prominent AI tasks, e.g., coloring or scheduling problems. Solving CSPs is, in general, known to be NP-complete and fixed-parameter intractable when parameterized by their constraint scopes. We give a characterization of those classes of CSPs for which the problem becomes fixed-parameter tractable. Our characterization significantly increases the utility of the CSP framework by making it possible to decide the fixed-parameter tractability of problems via their CSP formulations. We further extend our characterization to the evaluation of unions of conjunctive queries, a fundamental problem in databases. Furthermore, we provide some new insight on the frontier of PTIME solvability of CSPs. In particular, we observe that bounded fractional hypertree width is more general than bounded hypertree width only for classes that exhibit a certain type of exponential growth. The presented work resolves a long-standing open problem and yields powerful new tools for complexity research in AI and database theory.Comment: Full and extended version of the IJCAI2020 paper with the same titl
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