94 research outputs found

    A lower bound on CNF encodings of the at-most-one constraint

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    Constraint "at most one" is a basic cardinality constraint which requires that at most one of its nn boolean inputs is set to 11. This constraint is widely used when translating a problem into a conjunctive normal form (CNF) and we investigate its CNF encodings suitable for this purpose. An encoding differs from a CNF representation of a function in that it can use auxiliary variables. We are especially interested in propagation complete encodings which have the property that unit propagation is strong enough to enforce consistency on input variables. We show a lower bound on the number of clauses in any propagation complete encoding of the "at most one" constraint. The lower bound almost matches the size of the best known encodings. We also study an important case of 2-CNF encodings where we show a slightly better lower bound. The lower bound holds also for a related "exactly one" constraint.Comment: 38 pages, version 3 is significantly reorganized in order to improve readabilit

    On Structural Parameterizations of Hitting Set: Hitting Paths in Graphs Using 2-SAT

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    Hitting Set is a classic problem in combinatorial optimization. Its input consists of a set system F over a finite universe U and an integer t; the question is whether there is a set of t elements that intersects every set in F. The Hitting Set problem parameterized by the size of the solution is a well-known W[2]-complete problem in parameterized complexity theory. In this paper we investigate the complexity of Hitting Set under various structural parameterizations of the input. Our starting point is the folklore result that Hitting Set is polynomial-time solvable if there is a tree T on vertex set U such that the sets in F induce connected subtrees of T. We consider the case that there is a treelike graph with vertex set U such that the sets in F induce connected subgraphs; the parameter of the problem is a measure of how treelike the graph is. Our main positive result is an algorithm that, given a graph G with cyclomatic number k, a collection P of simple paths in G, and an integer t, determines in time 2^{5k} (|G| +|P|)^O(1) whether there is a vertex set of size t that hits all paths in P. It is based on a connection to the 2-SAT problem in multiple valued logic. For other parameterizations we derive W[1]-hardness and para-NP-completeness results.Comment: Presented at the 41st International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science, WG 2015. (The statement of Lemma 4 was corrected in this update.

    Variations on Instant Insanity

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    In one of the first papers about the complexity of puzzles, Robertson and Munro [14] proved that a generalized form of the then-popular Instant Insanity puzzle is NP-complete. Here we study several variations of this puzzle, exploring how the complexity depends on the piece shapes and the allowable orientations of those shapes

    Approximating Multilinear Monomial Coefficients and Maximum Multilinear Monomials in Multivariate Polynomials

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    This paper is our third step towards developing a theory of testing monomials in multivariate polynomials and concentrates on two problems: (1) How to compute the coefficients of multilinear monomials; and (2) how to find a maximum multilinear monomial when the input is a ΠΣΠ\Pi\Sigma\Pi polynomial. We first prove that the first problem is \#P-hard and then devise a O(3ns(n))O^*(3^ns(n)) upper bound for this problem for any polynomial represented by an arithmetic circuit of size s(n)s(n). Later, this upper bound is improved to O(2n)O^*(2^n) for ΠΣΠ\Pi\Sigma\Pi polynomials. We then design fully polynomial-time randomized approximation schemes for this problem for ΠΣ\Pi\Sigma polynomials. On the negative side, we prove that, even for ΠΣΠ\Pi\Sigma\Pi polynomials with terms of degree 2\le 2, the first problem cannot be approximated at all for any approximation factor 1\ge 1, nor {\em "weakly approximated"} in a much relaxed setting, unless P=NP. For the second problem, we first give a polynomial time λ\lambda-approximation algorithm for ΠΣΠ\Pi\Sigma\Pi polynomials with terms of degrees no more a constant λ2\lambda \ge 2. On the inapproximability side, we give a n(1ϵ)/2n^{(1-\epsilon)/2} lower bound, for any ϵ>0,\epsilon >0, on the approximation factor for ΠΣΠ\Pi\Sigma\Pi polynomials. When terms in these polynomials are constrained to degrees 2\le 2, we prove a 1.04761.0476 lower bound, assuming PNPP\not=NP; and a higher 1.06041.0604 lower bound, assuming the Unique Games Conjecture

    On Embeddability of Buses in Point Sets

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    Set membership of points in the plane can be visualized by connecting corresponding points via graphical features, like paths, trees, polygons, ellipses. In this paper we study the \emph{bus embeddability problem} (BEP): given a set of colored points we ask whether there exists a planar realization with one horizontal straight-line segment per color, called bus, such that all points with the same color are connected with vertical line segments to their bus. We present an ILP and an FPT algorithm for the general problem. For restricted versions of this problem, such as when the relative order of buses is predefined, or when a bus must be placed above all its points, we provide efficient algorithms. We show that another restricted version of the problem can be solved using 2-stack pushall sorting. On the negative side we prove the NP-completeness of a special case of BEP.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, conference version at GD 201

    Computing NodeTrix Representations of Clustered Graphs

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    NodeTrix representations are a popular way to visualize clustered graphs; they represent clusters as adjacency matrices and inter-cluster edges as curves connecting the matrix boundaries. We study the complexity of constructing NodeTrix representations focusing on planarity testing problems, and we show several NP-completeness results and some polynomial-time algorithms. Building on such algorithms we develop a JavaScript library for NodeTrix representations aimed at reducing the crossings between edges incident to the same matrix.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 24th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2016

    Tree decompositions with small cost

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    The f-cost of a tree decomposition ({Xi | i e I}, T = (I;F)) for a function f : N -> R+ is defined as EieI f(|Xi|). This measure associates with the running time or memory use of some algorithms that use the tree decomposition. In this paper we investigate the problem to find tree decompositions of minimum f-cost. A function f : N -> R+ is fast, if for every i e N: f(i+1) => 2*f(i). We show that for fast functions f, every graph G has a tree decomposition of minimum f-cost that corresponds to a minimal triangulation of G; if f is not fast, this does not hold. We give polynomial time algorithms for the problem, assuming f is a fast function, for graphs that has a polynomial number of minimal separators, for graphs of treewidth at most two, and for cographs, and show that the problem is NP-hard for bipartite graphs and for cobipartite graphs. We also discuss results for a weighted variant of the problem derived of an application from probabilistic networks

    Simplest random K-satisfiability problem

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    We study a simple and exactly solvable model for the generation of random satisfiability problems. These consist of γN\gamma N random boolean constraints which are to be satisfied simultaneously by NN logical variables. In statistical-mechanics language, the considered model can be seen as a diluted p-spin model at zero temperature. While such problems become extraordinarily hard to solve by local search methods in a large region of the parameter space, still at least one solution may be superimposed by construction. The statistical properties of the model can be studied exactly by the replica method and each single instance can be analyzed in polynomial time by a simple global solution method. The geometrical/topological structures responsible for dynamic and static phase transitions as well as for the onset of computational complexity in local search method are thoroughly analyzed. Numerical analysis on very large samples allows for a precise characterization of the critical scaling behaviour.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. E (Feb 2001). v2: minor errors and references correcte

    A Satisfiability-based Approach for Embedding Generalized Tanglegrams on Level Graphs

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    A tanglegram is a pair of trees on the same set of leaves with matching leaves in the two trees joined by an edge. Tanglegrams are widely used in computational biology to compare evolutionary histories of species. In this paper we present a formulation of two related combinatorial embedding problems concerning tanglegrams in terms of CNF-formulas. The first problem is known as planar embedding and the second as crossing minimization problem. We show that our satisfiability formulation of these problems can handle a much more general case with more than two, not necessarily binary or complete, trees defined on arbitrary sets of leaves and allowed to vary their layouts

    First-Digit Law in Nonextensive Statistics

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    Nonextensive statistics, characterized by a nonextensive parameter qq, is a promising and practically useful generalization of the Boltzmann statistics to describe power-law behaviors from physical and social observations. We here explore the unevenness of the first digit distribution of nonextensive statistics analytically and numerically. We find that the first-digit distribution follows Benford's law and fluctuates slightly in a periodical manner with respect to the logarithm of the temperature. The fluctuation decreases when qq increases, and the result converges to Benford's law exactly as qq approaches 2. The relevant regularities between nonextensive statistics and Benford's law are also presented and discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, published in Phys. Rev.
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