82 research outputs found
A Duality Based 2-Approximation Algorithm for Maximum Agreement Forest
We give a 2-approximation algorithm for the Maximum Agreement Forest problem
on two rooted binary trees. This NP-hard problem has been studied extensively
in the past two decades, since it can be used to compute the Subtree
Prune-and-Regraft (SPR) distance between two phylogenetic trees. Our result
improves on the very recent 2.5-approximation algorithm due to Shi, Feng, You
and Wang (2015). Our algorithm is the first approximation algorithm for this
problem that uses LP duality in its analysis
Layers and Matroids for the Traveling Salesman's Paths
Gottschalk and Vygen proved that every solution of the subtour elimination
linear program for traveling salesman paths is a convex combination of more and
more restrictive "generalized Gao-trees". We give a short proof of this fact,
as a layered convex combination of bases of a sequence of increasingly
restrictive matroids. A strongly polynomial, combinatorial algorithm follows
for finding this convex combination, which is a new tool offering polyhedral
insight, already instrumental in recent results for the path TSP
A Duality Based 2-Approximation Algorithm for Maximum Agreement Forest
We give a 2-approximation algorithm for the Maximum Agreement Forest problem
on two rooted binary trees. This NP-hard problem has been studied extensively
in the past two decades, since it can be used to compute the rooted Subtree
Prune-and-Regraft (rSPR) distance between two phylogenetic trees. Our algorithm
is combinatorial and its running time is quadratic in the input size. To prove
the approximation guarantee, we construct a feasible dual solution for a novel
linear programming formulation. In addition, we show this linear program is
stronger than previously known formulations, and we give a compact formulation,
showing that it can be solved in polynomial tim
Split Scheduling with Uniform Setup Times
We study a scheduling problem in which jobs may be split into parts, where
the parts of a split job may be processed simultaneously on more than one
machine. Each part of a job requires a setup time, however, on the machine
where the job part is processed. During setup a machine cannot process or set
up any other job. We concentrate on the basic case in which setup times are
job-, machine-, and sequence-independent. Problems of this kind were
encountered when modelling practical problems in planning disaster relief
operations. Our main algorithmic result is a polynomial-time algorithm for
minimising total completion time on two parallel identical machines. We argue
why the same problem with three machines is not an easy extension of the
two-machine case, leaving the complexity of this case as a tantalising open
problem. We give a constant-factor approximation algorithm for the general case
with any number of machines and a polynomial-time approximation scheme for a
fixed number of machines. For the version with objective minimising weighted
total completion time we prove NP-hardness. Finally, we conclude with an
overview of the state of the art for other split scheduling problems with job-,
machine-, and sequence-independent setup times
Improved immunoradiometric assay for plasma renin
BACKGROUND: Our renin IRMA overestimated renin in plasmas with high
prorenin-to-renin ratios. We suspected that the overestimation of renin
was caused less by cross-reactivity of the renin-specific antibody with
prorenin than by a conformational change of prorenin into an enzymatically
active form during the assay. METHODS: Because the inactive form of
prorenin converts slowly into an active form at low temperature, we raised
the assay temperature from 22 degrees C to 37 degrees C, simultaneously
shortening the incubation time from 24 to 6 h. The former IRMA was
performed in <1 working day with these modifications. RESULTS: The
comeasurement of prorenin as renin was eliminated. Reagents were stable at
37 degrees C, and the new and old IRMAs were comparable in terms of
precision and accuracy. The functional lower limit of the assay (4 mU/L)
was below the lower reference limit (9 mU/L). The modified IRMA agreed
closely with the activities measured with an enzyme-kinetic assay. Results
were not influenced by the plasma concentration of angiotensinogen. At
normal angiotensinogen concentrations, the IRMA closely correlated with
the classical enzyme-kinetic assay of plasma renin activity. CONCLUSION:
The modified IRMA, performed at 37 degrees C, avoids interference by
prorenin while retaining the desirable analytical characteristics of the
older IRMA and requiring less time
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