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Laminar Families and Metric Embeddings: Non-bipartite Maximum Matching Problem in the Semi-Streaming Model

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 Added by Kook Jin Ahn
 Publication date 2011
and research's language is English




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In this paper, we study the non-bipartite maximum matching problem in the semi-streaming model. The maximum matching problem in the semi-streaming model has received a significant amount of attention lately. While the problem has been somewhat well solved for bipartite graphs, the known algorithms for non-bipartite graphs use $2^{frac1epsilon}$ passes or $n^{frac1epsilon}$ time to compute a $(1-epsilon)$ approximation. In this paper we provide the first FPTAS (polynomial in $n,frac1epsilon$) for the problem which is efficient in both the running time and the number of passes. We also show that we can estimate the size of the matching in $O(frac1epsilon)$ passes using slightly superlinear space. To achieve both results, we use the structural properties of the matching polytope such as the laminarity of the tight sets and total dual integrality. The algorithms are iterative, and are based on the fractional packing and covering framework. However the formulations herein require exponentially many variables or constraints. We use laminarity, metric embeddings and graph sparsification to reduce the space required by the algorithms in between and across the iterations. This is the first use of these ideas in the semi-streaming model to solve a combinatorial optimization problem.



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147 - Kook Jin Ahn , Sudipto Guha 2011
In this paper, we study linear programming based approaches to the maximum matching problem in the semi-streaming model. The semi-streaming model has gained attention as a model for processing massive graphs as the importance of such graphs has increased. This is a model where edges are streamed-in in an adversarial order and we are allowed a space proportional to the number of vertices in a graph. In recent years, there has been several new results in this semi-streaming model. However broad techniques such as linear programming have not been adapted to this model. We present several techniques to adapt and optimize linear programming based approaches in the semi-streaming model with an application to the maximum matching problem. As a consequence, we improve (almost) all previous results on this problem, and also prove new results on interesting variants.
93 - Sepehr Assadi 2021
We prove a lower bound on the space complexity of two-pass semi-streaming algorithms that approximate the maximum matching problem. The lower bound is parameterized by the density of Ruzsa-Szemeredi graphs: * Any two-pass semi-streaming algorithm for maximum matching has approximation ratio at least $(1- Omega(frac{log{RS(n)}}{log{n}}))$, where $RS(n)$ denotes the maximum number of induced matchings of size $Theta(n)$ in any $n$-vertex graph, i.e., the largest density of a Ruzsa-Szemeredi graph. Currently, it is known that $n^{Omega(1/!loglog{n})} leq RS(n) leq frac{n}{2^{O(log^*{!(n)})}}$ and closing this (large) gap between upper and lower bounds has remained a notoriously difficult problem in combinatorics. Under the plausible hypothesis that $RS(n) = n^{Omega(1)}$, our lower bound is the first to rule out small-constant approximation two-pass semi-streaming algorithms for the maximum matching problem, making progress on a longstanding open question in the graph streaming literature.
We present a deterministic $(1+varepsilon)$-approximate maximum matching algorithm in $mathsf{poly}(1/varepsilon)$ passes in the semi-streaming model, solving the long-standing open problem of breaking the exponential barrier in the dependence on $1/varepsilon$. Our algorithm exponentially improves on the well-known randomized $(1/varepsilon)^{O(1/varepsilon)}$-pass algorithm from the seminal work by McGregor [APPROX05], the recent deterministic algorithm by Tirodkar with the same pass complexity [FSTTCS18], as well as the deterministic $log n cdot mathsf{poly}(1/varepsilon)$-pass algorithm by Ahn and Guha [ICALP11].
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