Improved Algorithms for Recognizing Perfect Graphs and Finding Shortest Odd and Even Holes

July 15, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Yung-Chung Chiu, Kai-Yuan Lai, Hsueh-I Lu arXiv ID 2207.07613 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Cross-listed math.CO Citations 1 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Various classes of induced subgraphs are involved in the deepest results of graph theory and graph algorithms. A prominent example concerns the {\em perfection} of $G$ that the chromatic number of each induced subgraph $H$ of $G$ equals the clique number of $H$. The seminal Strong Perfect Graph Theorem confirms that the perfection of $G$ can be determined by detecting odd holes in $G$ and its complement. Chudnovsky et al. show in 2005 an $O(n^9)$ algorithm for recognizing perfect graphs, which can be implemented to run in $O(n^{6+Ο‰})$ time for the exponent $Ο‰<2.373$ of square-matrix multiplication. We show the following improved algorithms. 1. The tractability of detecting odd holes was open for decades until the major breakthrough of Chudnovsky et al. in 2020. Their $O(n^9)$ algorithm is later implemented by Lai et al. to run in $O(n^8)$ time, leading to the best formerly known algorithm for recognizing perfect graphs. Our first result is an $O(n^7)$ algorithm for detecting odd holes, implying an $O(n^7)$ algorithm for recognizing perfect graphs. 2. Chudnovsky et al. extend in 2021 the $O(n^9)$ algorithms for detecting odd holes (2020) and recognizing perfect graphs (2005) into the first polynomial algorithm for obtaining a shortest odd hole, which runs in $O(n^{14})$ time. We reduce the time for finding a shortest odd hole to $O(n^{13})$. 3. Conforti et al. show in 1997 the first polynomial algorithm for detecting even holes, running in about $O(n^{40})$ time. It then takes a line of intensive efforts in the literature to bring down the complexity to $O(n^{31})$, $O(n^{19})$, $O(n^{11})$, and finally $O(n^9)$. On the other hand, the tractability of finding a shortest even hole has been open for 16 years until the very recent $O(n^{31})$ algorithm of Cheong and Lu in 2022. We improve the time of finding a shortest even hole to $O(n^{23})$.
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