4,280 research outputs found
Online Multi-Coloring with Advice
We consider the problem of online graph multi-coloring with advice.
Multi-coloring is often used to model frequency allocation in cellular
networks. We give several nearly tight upper and lower bounds for the most
standard topologies of cellular networks, paths and hexagonal graphs. For the
path, negative results trivially carry over to bipartite graphs, and our
positive results are also valid for bipartite graphs. The advice given
represents information that is likely to be available, studying for instance
the data from earlier similar periods of time.Comment: IMADA-preprint-c
The Sampling-and-Learning Framework: A Statistical View of Evolutionary Algorithms
Evolutionary algorithms (EAs), a large class of general purpose optimization
algorithms inspired from the natural phenomena, are widely used in various
industrial optimizations and often show excellent performance. This paper
presents an attempt towards revealing their general power from a statistical
view of EAs. By summarizing a large range of EAs into the sampling-and-learning
framework, we show that the framework directly admits a general analysis on the
probable-absolute-approximate (PAA) query complexity. We particularly focus on
the framework with the learning subroutine being restricted as a binary
classification, which results in the sampling-and-classification (SAC)
algorithms. With the help of the learning theory, we obtain a general upper
bound on the PAA query complexity of SAC algorithms. We further compare SAC
algorithms with the uniform search in different situations. Under the
error-target independence condition, we show that SAC algorithms can achieve
polynomial speedup to the uniform search, but not super-polynomial speedup.
Under the one-side-error condition, we show that super-polynomial speedup can
be achieved. This work only touches the surface of the framework. Its power
under other conditions is still open
Algebraic Methods in the Congested Clique
In this work, we use algebraic methods for studying distance computation and
subgraph detection tasks in the congested clique model. Specifically, we adapt
parallel matrix multiplication implementations to the congested clique,
obtaining an round matrix multiplication algorithm, where
is the exponent of matrix multiplication. In conjunction
with known techniques from centralised algorithmics, this gives significant
improvements over previous best upper bounds in the congested clique model. The
highlight results include:
-- triangle and 4-cycle counting in rounds, improving upon the
triangle detection algorithm of Dolev et al. [DISC 2012],
-- a -approximation of all-pairs shortest paths in
rounds, improving upon the -round -approximation algorithm of Nanongkai [STOC 2014], and
-- computing the girth in rounds, which is the first
non-trivial solution in this model.
In addition, we present a novel constant-round combinatorial algorithm for
detecting 4-cycles.Comment: This is work is a merger of arxiv:1412.2109 and arxiv:1412.266
A -Vertex Kernel for Maximum Internal Spanning Tree
We consider the parameterized version of the maximum internal spanning tree
problem, which, given an -vertex graph and a parameter , asks for a
spanning tree with at least internal vertices. Fomin et al. [J. Comput.
System Sci., 79:1-6] crafted a very ingenious reduction rule, and showed that a
simple application of this rule is sufficient to yield a -vertex kernel.
Here we propose a novel way to use the same reduction rule, resulting in an
improved -vertex kernel. Our algorithm applies first a greedy procedure
consisting of a sequence of local exchange operations, which ends with a
local-optimal spanning tree, and then uses this special tree to find a
reducible structure. As a corollary of our kernel, we obtain a deterministic
algorithm for the problem running in time
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