Publication | Closed Access
Bidimensionality: new connections between FPT algorithms and PTASs
142
Citations
43
References
2005
Year
Mathematical ProgrammingComputational Complexity TheoryEngineeringPlanar GraphComputational ComplexityFormal VerificationStructural Graph TheoryExtremal CombinatoricsDiscrete MathematicsCombinatorial OptimizationComputational GeometryApproximation TheoryEdge DominatingComputer ScienceApproximation AlgorithmsGraph AlgorithmAlgorithmic DevelopmentFpt AlgorithmsGraph TheoryAutomated ReasoningFormal MethodsBusinessFixed-parameter TractabilityTime ComplexityExtremal Graph Theory
We demonstrate a new connection between fixed-parameter tractability and approximation algorithms for combinatorial optimization problems on planar graphs and their generalizations. Specifically, we extend the theory of so-called bidimensional problems to show that essentially all such problems have both subexponential fixed-parameter algorithms and PTASs. Bidimensional problems include e.g. feedback vertex set, vertex cover, minimum maximal matching, face cover, a series of vertex-removal problems, dominating set, edge dominating set, r-dominating set, diameter, connected dominating set, connected edge dominating set, and connected r-dominating set. We obtain PTASs for all of these problems in planar graphs and certain generalizations; of particular interest are our results for the two well-known problems of connected dominating set and general feedback vertex set for planar graphs and their generalizations, for which PTASs were not known to exist. Our techniques generalize and in some sense unify the two main previous approaches for designing PTASs in planar graphs, namely, the Lipton-Tarjan separator approach [FOCS'77] and the Baker layerwise decomposition approach [FOCS'83]. In particular, we replace the notion of separators with a more powerful tool from the bidimensionality theory, enabling the first approach to apply to a much broader class of minimization problems than previously possible; and through the use of a structural backbone and thickening of layers we demonstrate how the second approach can be applied to problems with a nonlocal structure.
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