362 research outputs found

    Linear Time Parameterized Algorithms via Skew-Symmetric Multicuts

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    A skew-symmetric graph (D=(V,A),σ)(D=(V,A),\sigma) is a directed graph DD with an involution σ\sigma on the set of vertices and arcs. In this paper, we introduce a separation problem, dd-Skew-Symmetric Multicut, where we are given a skew-symmetric graph DD, a family of T\cal T of dd-sized subsets of vertices and an integer kk. The objective is to decide if there is a set XAX\subseteq A of kk arcs such that every set JJ in the family has a vertex vv such that vv and σ(v)\sigma(v) are in different connected components of D=(V,A(Xσ(X))D'=(V,A\setminus (X\cup \sigma(X)). In this paper, we give an algorithm for this problem which runs in time O((4d)k(m+n+))O((4d)^{k}(m+n+\ell)), where mm is the number of arcs in the graph, nn the number of vertices and \ell the length of the family given in the input. Using our algorithm, we show that Almost 2-SAT has an algorithm with running time O(4kk4)O(4^kk^4\ell) and we obtain algorithms for {\sc Odd Cycle Transversal} and {\sc Edge Bipartization} which run in time O(4kk4(m+n))O(4^kk^4(m+n)) and O(4kk5(m+n))O(4^kk^5(m+n)) respectively. This resolves an open problem posed by Reed, Smith and Vetta [Operations Research Letters, 2003] and improves upon the earlier almost linear time algorithm of Kawarabayashi and Reed [SODA, 2010]. We also show that Deletion q-Horn Backdoor Set Detection is a special case of 3-Skew-Symmetric Multicut, giving us an algorithm for Deletion q-Horn Backdoor Set Detection which runs in time O(12kk5)O(12^kk^5\ell). This gives the first fixed-parameter tractable algorithm for this problem answering a question posed in a paper by a superset of the authors [STACS, 2013]. Using this result, we get an algorithm for Satisfiability which runs in time O(12kk5)O(12^kk^5\ell) where kk is the size of the smallest q-Horn deletion backdoor set, with \ell being the length of the input formula

    A Linear Time Parameterized Algorithm for Node Unique Label Cover

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    The optimization version of the Unique Label Cover problem is at the heart of the Unique Games Conjecture which has played an important role in the proof of several tight inapproximability results. In recent years, this problem has been also studied extensively from the point of view of parameterized complexity. Cygan et al. [FOCS 2012] proved that this problem is fixed-parameter tractable (FPT) and Wahlstr\"om [SODA 2014] gave an FPT algorithm with an improved parameter dependence. Subsequently, Iwata, Wahlstr\"om and Yoshida [2014] proved that the edge version of Unique Label Cover can be solved in linear FPT-time. That is, there is an FPT algorithm whose dependence on the input-size is linear. However, such an algorithm for the node version of the problem was left as an open problem. In this paper, we resolve this question by presenting the first linear-time FPT algorithm for Node Unique Label Cover

    Bidimensionality and Geometric Graphs

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    In this paper we use several of the key ideas from Bidimensionality to give a new generic approach to design EPTASs and subexponential time parameterized algorithms for problems on classes of graphs which are not minor closed, but instead exhibit a geometric structure. In particular we present EPTASs and subexponential time parameterized algorithms for Feedback Vertex Set, Vertex Cover, Connected Vertex Cover, Diamond Hitting Set, on map graphs and unit disk graphs, and for Cycle Packing and Minimum-Vertex Feedback Edge Set on unit disk graphs. Our results are based on the recent decomposition theorems proved by Fomin et al [SODA 2011], and our algorithms work directly on the input graph. Thus it is not necessary to compute the geometric representations of the input graph. To the best of our knowledge, these results are previously unknown, with the exception of the EPTAS and a subexponential time parameterized algorithm on unit disk graphs for Vertex Cover, which were obtained by Marx [ESA 2005] and Alber and Fiala [J. Algorithms 2004], respectively. We proceed to show that our approach can not be extended in its full generality to more general classes of geometric graphs, such as intersection graphs of unit balls in R^d, d >= 3. Specifically we prove that Feedback Vertex Set on unit-ball graphs in R^3 neither admits PTASs unless P=NP, nor subexponential time algorithms unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis fails. Additionally, we show that the decomposition theorems which our approach is based on fail for disk graphs and that therefore any extension of our results to disk graphs would require new algorithmic ideas. On the other hand, we prove that our EPTASs and subexponential time algorithms for Vertex Cover and Connected Vertex Cover carry over both to disk graphs and to unit-ball graphs in R^d for every fixed d

    Subexponential Parameterized Odd Cycle Transversal on Planar Graphs

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    In the Odd Cycle Transversal (OCT) problem we are given a graph G on n vertices and an integer k, the objective is to determine whether there exists a vertex set O in G of size at most k such that G - O is bipartite. Reed, Smith and Vetta [Oper. Res. Lett., 2004] gave an algorithm for OCT with running time 3^kn^{O(1)}. Assuming the exponential time hypothesis of Impagliazzo, Paturi and Zane, the running time can not be improved to 2^{o(k)}n^{O(1)}. We show that OCT admits a randomized algorithm running in O(n^{O(1)} + 2^{O(sqrt{k} log k)}n) time when the input graph is planar. As a byproduct we also obtain a linear time algorithm for OCT on planar graphs with running time O(n^O(1) + 2O( sqrt(k) log k) n) time. This improves over an algorithm of Fiorini et al. [Disc. Appl. Math., 2008]

    Fixed-parameter tractable canonization and isomorphism test for graphs of bounded treewidth

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    We give a fixed-parameter tractable algorithm that, given a parameter kk and two graphs G1,G2G_1,G_2, either concludes that one of these graphs has treewidth at least kk, or determines whether G1G_1 and G2G_2 are isomorphic. The running time of the algorithm on an nn-vertex graph is 2O(k5logk)n52^{O(k^5\log k)}\cdot n^5, and this is the first fixed-parameter algorithm for Graph Isomorphism parameterized by treewidth. Our algorithm in fact solves the more general canonization problem. We namely design a procedure working in 2O(k5logk)n52^{O(k^5\log k)}\cdot n^5 time that, for a given graph GG on nn vertices, either concludes that the treewidth of GG is at least kk, or: * finds in an isomorphic-invariant way a graph c(G)\mathfrak{c}(G) that is isomorphic to GG; * finds an isomorphism-invariant construction term --- an algebraic expression that encodes GG together with a tree decomposition of GG of width O(k4)O(k^4). Hence, the isomorphism test reduces to verifying whether the computed isomorphic copies or the construction terms for G1G_1 and G2G_2 are equal.Comment: Full version of a paper presented at FOCS 201
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