10,763 research outputs found
Parameterized Complexity of Edge Interdiction Problems
We study the parameterized complexity of interdiction problems in graphs. For
an optimization problem on graphs, one can formulate an interdiction problem as
a game consisting of two players, namely, an interdictor and an evader, who
compete on an objective with opposing interests. In edge interdiction problems,
every edge of the input graph has an interdiction cost associated with it and
the interdictor interdicts the graph by modifying the edges in the graph, and
the number of such modifications is constrained by the interdictor's budget.
The evader then solves the given optimization problem on the modified graph.
The action of the interdictor must impede the evader as much as possible. We
focus on edge interdiction problems related to minimum spanning tree, maximum
matching and shortest paths. These problems arise in different real world
scenarios. We derive several fixed-parameter tractability and W[1]-hardness
results for these interdiction problems with respect to various parameters.
Next, we show close relation between interdiction problems and partial cover
problems on bipartite graphs where the goal is not to cover all elements but to
minimize/maximize the number of covered elements with specific number of sets.
Hereby, we investigate the parameterized complexity of several partial cover
problems on bipartite graphs
On Covering a Graph Optimally with Induced Subgraphs
We consider the problem of covering a graph with a given number of induced
subgraphs so that the maximum number of vertices in each subgraph is minimized.
We prove NP-completeness of the problem, prove lower bounds, and give
approximation algorithms for certain graph classes.Comment: 9 page
Hitting Diamonds and Growing Cacti
We consider the following NP-hard problem: in a weighted graph, find a
minimum cost set of vertices whose removal leaves a graph in which no two
cycles share an edge. We obtain a constant-factor approximation algorithm,
based on the primal-dual method. Moreover, we show that the integrality gap of
the natural LP relaxation of the problem is \Theta(\log n), where n denotes the
number of vertices in the graph.Comment: v2: several minor changes
Asymmetric Traveling Salesman Path and Directed Latency Problems
We study integrality gaps and approximability of two closely related problems
on directed graphs. Given a set V of n nodes in an underlying asymmetric metric
and two specified nodes s and t, both problems ask to find an s-t path visiting
all other nodes. In the asymmetric traveling salesman path problem (ATSPP), the
objective is to minimize the total cost of this path. In the directed latency
problem, the objective is to minimize the sum of distances on this path from s
to each node. Both of these problems are NP-hard. The best known approximation
algorithms for ATSPP had ratio O(log n) until the very recent result that
improves it to O(log n/ log log n). However, only a bound of O(sqrt(n)) for the
integrality gap of its linear programming relaxation has been known. For
directed latency, the best previously known approximation algorithm has a
guarantee of O(n^(1/2+eps)), for any constant eps > 0. We present a new
algorithm for the ATSPP problem that has an approximation ratio of O(log n),
but whose analysis also bounds the integrality gap of the standard LP
relaxation of ATSPP by the same factor. This solves an open problem posed by
Chekuri and Pal [2007]. We then pursue a deeper study of this linear program
and its variations, which leads to an algorithm for the k-person ATSPP (where k
s-t paths of minimum total length are sought) and an O(log n)-approximation for
the directed latency problem
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