11,089 research outputs found

    Hamilton decompositions of regular expanders: applications

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    In a recent paper, we showed that every sufficiently large regular digraph G on n vertices whose degree is linear in n and which is a robust outexpander has a decomposition into edge-disjoint Hamilton cycles. The main consequence of this theorem is that every regular tournament on n vertices can be decomposed into (n-1)/2 edge-disjoint Hamilton cycles, whenever n is sufficiently large. This verified a conjecture of Kelly from 1968. In this paper, we derive a number of further consequences of our result on robust outexpanders, the main ones are the following: (i) an undirected analogue of our result on robust outexpanders; (ii) best possible bounds on the size of an optimal packing of edge-disjoint Hamilton cycles in a graph of minimum degree d for a large range of values for d. (iii) a similar result for digraphs of given minimum semidegree; (iv) an approximate version of a conjecture of Nash-Williams on Hamilton decompositions of dense regular graphs; (v) the observation that dense quasi-random graphs are robust outexpanders; (vi) a verification of the `very dense' case of a conjecture of Frieze and Krivelevich on packing edge-disjoint Hamilton cycles in random graphs; (vii) a proof of a conjecture of Erdos on the size of an optimal packing of edge-disjoint Hamilton cycles in a random tournament.Comment: final version, to appear in J. Combinatorial Theory

    Challenges for Efficient Query Evaluation on Structured Probabilistic Data

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    Query answering over probabilistic data is an important task but is generally intractable. However, a new approach for this problem has recently been proposed, based on structural decompositions of input databases, following, e.g., tree decompositions. This paper presents a vision for a database management system for probabilistic data built following this structural approach. We review our existing and ongoing work on this topic and highlight many theoretical and practical challenges that remain to be addressed.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, 23 references. Accepted for publication at SUM 201

    Predictive PAC Learning and Process Decompositions

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    We informally call a stochastic process learnable if it admits a generalization error approaching zero in probability for any concept class with finite VC-dimension (IID processes are the simplest example). A mixture of learnable processes need not be learnable itself, and certainly its generalization error need not decay at the same rate. In this paper, we argue that it is natural in predictive PAC to condition not on the past observations but on the mixture component of the sample path. This definition not only matches what a realistic learner might demand, but also allows us to sidestep several otherwise grave problems in learning from dependent data. In particular, we give a novel PAC generalization bound for mixtures of learnable processes with a generalization error that is not worse than that of each mixture component. We also provide a characterization of mixtures of absolutely regular (β\beta-mixing) processes, of independent probability-theoretic interest.Comment: 9 pages, accepted in NIPS 201

    Digraph Complexity Measures and Applications in Formal Language Theory

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    We investigate structural complexity measures on digraphs, in particular the cycle rank. This concept is intimately related to a classical topic in formal language theory, namely the star height of regular languages. We explore this connection, and obtain several new algorithmic insights regarding both cycle rank and star height. Among other results, we show that computing the cycle rank is NP-complete, even for sparse digraphs of maximum outdegree 2. Notwithstanding, we provide both a polynomial-time approximation algorithm and an exponential-time exact algorithm for this problem. The former algorithm yields an O((log n)^(3/2))- approximation in polynomial time, whereas the latter yields the optimum solution, and runs in time and space O*(1.9129^n) on digraphs of maximum outdegree at most two. Regarding the star height problem, we identify a subclass of the regular languages for which we can precisely determine the computational complexity of the star height problem. Namely, the star height problem for bideterministic languages is NP-complete, and this holds already for binary alphabets. Then we translate the algorithmic results concerning cycle rank to the bideterministic star height problem, thus giving a polynomial-time approximation as well as a reasonably fast exact exponential algorithm for bideterministic star height.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur

    Schnyder decompositions for regular plane graphs and application to drawing

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    Schnyder woods are decompositions of simple triangulations into three edge-disjoint spanning trees crossing each other in a specific way. In this article, we define a generalization of Schnyder woods to dd-angulations (plane graphs with faces of degree dd) for all d≥3d\geq 3. A \emph{Schnyder decomposition} is a set of dd spanning forests crossing each other in a specific way, and such that each internal edge is part of exactly d−2d-2 of the spanning forests. We show that a Schnyder decomposition exists if and only if the girth of the dd-angulation is dd. As in the case of Schnyder woods (d=3d=3), there are alternative formulations in terms of orientations ("fractional" orientations when d≥5d\geq 5) and in terms of corner-labellings. Moreover, the set of Schnyder decompositions on a fixed dd-angulation of girth dd is a distributive lattice. We also show that the structures dual to Schnyder decompositions (on dd-regular plane graphs of mincut dd rooted at a vertex v∗v^*) are decompositions into dd spanning trees rooted at v∗v^* such that each edge not incident to v∗v^* is used in opposite directions by two trees. Additionally, for even values of dd, we show that a subclass of Schnyder decompositions, which are called even, enjoy additional properties that yield a reduced formulation; in the case d=4, these correspond to well-studied structures on simple quadrangulations (2-orientations and partitions into 2 spanning trees). In the case d=4, the dual of even Schnyder decompositions yields (planar) orthogonal and straight-line drawing algorithms. For a 4-regular plane graph GG of mincut 4 with nn vertices plus a marked vertex vv, the vertices of G\vG\backslash v are placed on a (n−1)×(n−1)(n-1) \times (n-1) grid according to a permutation pattern, and in the orthogonal drawing each of the 2n−22n-2 edges of G\vG\backslash v has exactly one bend. Embedding also the marked vertex vv is doable at the cost of two additional rows and columns and 8 additional bends for the 4 edges incident to vv. We propose a further compaction step for the drawing algorithm and show that the obtained grid-size is strongly concentrated around 25n/32×25n/3225n/32\times 25n/32 for a uniformly random instance with nn vertices
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