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Following the groundbreaking algorithm of Moser and Tardos for the Lovasz Local Lemma (LLL), there has been a plethora of results analyzing local search algorithms for various constraint satisfaction problems. The algorithms considered fall into two broad categories: resampling algorithms, analyzed via different algorithmic LLL conditions; and backtracking algorithms, analyzed via entropy compression arguments. This paper introduces a new convergence condition that seamlessly handles resampling, backtracking, and hybrid algorithms, i.e., algorithms that perform both resampling and backtracking steps. Unlike all past LLL work, our condition replaces the notion of a dependency or causality graph by quantifying point-to-set correlations between bad events. As a result, our condition simultaneously: (i)~captures the most general algorithmic LLL condition known as a special case; (ii)~significantly simplifies the analysis of entropy compression applications; (iii)~relates backtracking algorithms, which are conceptually very different from resampling algorithms, to the LLL; and most importantly (iv)~allows for the analysis of hybrid algorithms, which were outside the scope of previous techniques. We give several applications of our condition, including a new hybrid vertex coloring algorithm that extends the recent breakthrough result of Molloy for coloring triangle-free graphs to arbitrary graphs.
We develop tools for analyzing focused stochastic local search algorithms. These are algorithms which search a state space probabilistically by repeatedly selecting a constraint that is violated in the current state and moving to a random nearby stat
Let $Phi = (V, mathcal{C})$ be a constraint satisfaction problem on variables $v_1,dots, v_n$ such that each constraint depends on at most $k$ variables and such that each variable assumes values in an alphabet of size at most $[q]$. Suppose that eac
We present a poly $log log n$ time randomized CONGEST algorithm for a natural class of Lovasz Local Lemma (LLL) instances on constant degree graphs. This implies, among other things, that there are no LCL problems with randomized complexity between $
We consider the task of designing Local Computation Algorithms (LCA) for applications of the Lov{a}sz Local Lemma (LLL). LCA is a class of sublinear algorithms proposed by Rubinfeld et al.~cite{Ronitt} that have received a lot of attention in recent
We show that any randomised Monte Carlo distributed algorithm for the Lovasz local lemma requires $Omega(log log n)$ communication rounds, assuming that it finds a correct assignment with high probability. Our result holds even in the special case of