4,482 research outputs found
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
Hexagonal Tilings: Tutte Uniqueness
We develop the necessary machinery in order to prove that hexagonal tilings
are uniquely determined by their Tutte polynomial, showing as an example how to
apply this technique to the toroidal hexagonal tiling.Comment: 12 figure
Sandwiching saturation number of fullerene graphs
The saturation number of a graph is the cardinality of any smallest
maximal matching of , and it is denoted by . Fullerene graphs are
cubic planar graphs with exactly twelve 5-faces; all the other faces are
hexagons. They are used to capture the structure of carbon molecules. Here we
show that the saturation number of fullerenes on vertices is essentially
Fast counting with tensor networks
We introduce tensor network contraction algorithms for counting satisfying
assignments of constraint satisfaction problems (#CSPs). We represent each
arbitrary #CSP formula as a tensor network, whose full contraction yields the
number of satisfying assignments of that formula, and use graph theoretical
methods to determine favorable orders of contraction. We employ our heuristics
for the solution of #P-hard counting boolean satisfiability (#SAT) problems,
namely monotone #1-in-3SAT and #Cubic-Vertex-Cover, and find that they
outperform state-of-the-art solvers by a significant margin.Comment: v2: added results for monotone #1-in-3SAT; published versio
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