FPT Approximations for Capacitated/Fair Clustering with Outliers
May 02, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· π arXiv.org
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Authors
Rajni Dabas, Neelima Gupta, Tanmay Inamdar
arXiv ID
2305.01471
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Citations
2
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Clustering problems such as $k$-Median, and $k$-Means, are motivated from applications such as location planning, unsupervised learning among others. In such applications, it is important to find the clustering of points that is not ``skewed'' in terms of the number of points, i.e., no cluster should contain too many points. This is modeled by capacity constraints on the sizes of clusters. In an orthogonal direction, another important consideration in clustering is how to handle the presence of outliers in the data. Indeed, these clustering problems have been generalized in the literature to separately handle capacity constraints and outliers. To the best of our knowledge, there has been very little work on studying the approximability of clustering problems that can simultaneously handle both capacities and outliers. We initiate the study of the Capacitated $k$-Median with Outliers (C$k$MO) problem. Here, we want to cluster all except $m$ outlier points into at most $k$ clusters, such that (i) the clusters respect the capacity constraints, and (ii) the cost of clustering, defined as the sum of distances of each non-outlier point to its assigned cluster-center, is minimized. We design the first constant-factor approximation algorithms for C$k$MO. In particular, our algorithm returns a (3+Ξ΅)-approximation for C$k$MO in general metric spaces, and a (1+Ξ΅)-approximation in Euclidean spaces of constant dimension, that runs in time in time $f(k, m, Ξ΅) \cdot |I_m|^{O(1)}$, where $|I_m|$ denotes the input size. We can also extend these results to a broader class of problems, including Capacitated k-Means/k-Facility Location with Outliers, and Size-Balanced Fair Clustering problems with Outliers. For each of these problems, we obtain an approximation ratio that matches the best known guarantee of the corresponding outlier-free problem.
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