Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Classifying the Complexity of Constraints Using Finite Algebras

571

Citations

38

References

2005

Year

TLDR

Constraint satisfaction problems model many combinatorial tasks, are NP‑complete in general, but become tractable under certain constraint restrictions. The authors aim to map every set of constraint relations to a finite universal algebra and to characterize CSP complexity through algebraic properties, proposing a tractable algebra notion and a general algebraic criterion for tractability. They translate the classification of restricted CSPs into universal algebra, associating constraints with finite algebras, studying subalgebras and homomorphic images, and defining tractable algebras.

Abstract

Many natural combinatorial problems can be expressed as constraint satisfaction problems. This class of problems is known to be NP-complete in general, but certain restrictions on the form of the constraints can ensure tractability. Here we show that any set of relations used to specify the allowed forms of constraints can be associated with a finite universal algebra and we explore how the computational complexity of the corresponding constraint satisfaction problem is connected to the properties of this algebra. Hence, we completely translate the problem of classifying the complexity of restricted constraint satisfaction problems into the language of universal algebra. We introduce a notion of "tractable algebra," and investigate how the tractability of an algebra relates to the tractability of the smaller algebras which may be derived from it, including its subalgebras and homomorphic images. This allows us to reduce significantly the types of algebras which need to be classified. Using our results we also show that if the decision problem associated with a given collection of constraint types can be solved efficiently, then so can the corresponding search problem. We then classify all finite strictly simple surjective algebras with respect to tractability, obtaining a dichotomy theorem which generalizes Schaefer's dichotomy for the generalized satisfiability problem. Finally, we suggest a possible general algebraic criterion for distinguishing the tractable and intractable cases of the constraint satisfaction problem.

References

YearCitations

Page 1