19,622 research outputs found

    On domination problems for permutation and other graphs

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    AbstractThere is an increasing interest in results on the influence of restricting NP-complete graph problems to special classes of perfect graphs as, e.g., permutation graphs. It was shown that several problems restricted to permutation graphs are solvable in polynomial time [2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 14, 16].In this paper we give 1.(i) an algorithm with time bound O(n2) for the weighted independent domination problem on permutation graphs (which is an improvement of the O(n3) solution given in [7]);2.(ii) a polynomial time solution for the weighted feedback vertex set problem on permutation graphs;3.(iii) an investigation of (weighted) dominating clique problems for several graph classes including an NP-completeness result for weakly triangulated graphs as well as polynomial time bounds

    Distributed Distance-rr Dominating Set on Sparse High-Girth Graphs

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    The dominating set problem and its generalization, the distance-rr dominating set problem, are among the well-studied problems in the sequential settings. In distributed models of computation, unlike for domination, not much is known about distance-r domination. This is actually the case for other important closely-related covering problem, namely, the distance-rr independent set problem. By result of Kuhn et al. we know the distributed domination problem is hard on high girth graphs; we study the problem on a slightly restricted subclass of these graphs: graphs of bounded expansion with high girth, i.e. their girth should be at least 4r+34r + 3. We show that in such graphs, for every constant rr, a simple greedy CONGEST algorithm provides a constant-factor approximation of the minimum distance-rr dominating set problem, in a constant number of rounds. More precisely, our constants are dependent to rr, not to the size of the graph. This is the first algorithm that shows there are non-trivial constant factor approximations in constant number of rounds for any distance rr-covering problem in distributed settings. To show the dependency on r is inevitable, we provide an unconditional lower bound showing the same problem is hard already on rings. We also show that our analysis of the algorithm is relatively tight, that is any significant improvement to the approximation factor requires new algorithmic ideas

    Rainbow domination and related problems on some classes of perfect graphs

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    Let k∈Nk \in \mathbb{N} and let GG be a graph. A function f:V(G)→2[k]f: V(G) \rightarrow 2^{[k]} is a rainbow function if, for every vertex xx with f(x)=∅f(x)=\emptyset, f(N(x))=[k]f(N(x)) =[k]. The rainbow domination number γkr(G)\gamma_{kr}(G) is the minimum of ∑x∈V(G)∣f(x)∣\sum_{x \in V(G)} |f(x)| over all rainbow functions. We investigate the rainbow domination problem for some classes of perfect graphs

    On the algorithmic complexity of twelve covering and independence parameters of graphs

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    The definitions of four previously studied parameters related to total coverings and total matchings of graphs can be restricted, thereby obtaining eight parameters related to covering and independence, each of which has been studied previously in some form. Here we survey briefly results concerning total coverings and total matchings of graphs, and consider the aforementioned 12 covering and independence parameters with regard to algorithmic complexity. We survey briefly known results for several graph classes, and obtain new NP-completeness results for the minimum total cover and maximum minimal total cover problems in planar graphs, the minimum maximal total matching problem in bipartite and chordal graphs, and the minimum independent dominating set problem in planar cubic graphs
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