1,458 research outputs found
Revisiting the Complexity of and Algorithms for the Graph Traversal Edit Distance and Its Variants
The graph traversal edit distance (GTED), introduced by Ebrahimpour Boroojeny et al. (2018), is an elegant distance measure defined as the minimum edit distance between strings reconstructed from Eulerian trails in two edge-labeled graphs. GTED can be used to infer evolutionary relationships between species by comparing de Bruijn graphs directly without the computationally costly and error-prone process of genome assembly. Ebrahimpour Boroojeny et al. (2018) propose two ILP formulations for GTED and claim that GTED is polynomially solvable because the linear programming relaxation of one of the ILPs will always yield optimal integer solutions. The claim that GTED is polynomially solvable is contradictory to the complexity of existing string-to-graph matching problems.
We resolve this conflict in complexity results by proving that GTED is NP-complete and showing that the ILPs proposed by Ebrahimpour Boroojeny et al. do not solve GTED but instead solve for a lower bound of GTED and are not solvable in polynomial time. In addition, we provide the first two, correct ILP formulations of GTED and evaluate their empirical efficiency. These results provide solid algorithmic foundations for comparing genome graphs and point to the direction of heuristics that estimate GTED efficiently
A Whitney polynomial for hypermaps
We introduce a Whitney polynomial for hypermaps and use it to generalize the
results connecting the circuit partition polynomial to the Martin polynomial
and the results on several graph invariants
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