,
Nathaniel Harms
,
Andrey Kupavskii
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license
We study the problems of adjacency sketching, small-distance sketching, and approximate distance threshold (ADT) sketching for monotone classes of graphs. The algorithmic problem is to assign random sketches to the vertices of any graph G in the class, so that adjacency, exact distance thresholds, or approximate distance thresholds of two vertices u,v can be decided (with probability at least 2/3) from the sketches of u and v, by a decoder that does not know the graph. The goal is to determine when sketches of constant size exist. Our main results are that, for monotone classes of graphs: constant-size adjacency sketches exist if and only if the class has bounded arboricity; constant-size small-distance sketches exist if and only if the class has bounded expansion; constant-size ADT sketches imply that the class has bounded expansion; any class of constant expansion (i.e. any proper minor closed class) has a constant-size ADT sketch; and a class may have arbitrarily small expansion without admitting a constant-size ADT sketch.
@InProceedings{esperet_et_al:LIPIcs.APPROX/RANDOM.2022.18,
author = {Esperet, Louis and Harms, Nathaniel and Kupavskii, Andrey},
title = {{Sketching Distances in Monotone Graph Classes}},
booktitle = {Approximation, Randomization, and Combinatorial Optimization. Algorithms and Techniques (APPROX/RANDOM 2022)},
pages = {18:1--18:23},
series = {Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs)},
ISBN = {978-3-95977-249-5},
ISSN = {1868-8969},
year = {2022},
volume = {245},
editor = {Chakrabarti, Amit and Swamy, Chaitanya},
publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl -- Leibniz-Zentrum f{\"u}r Informatik},
address = {Dagstuhl, Germany},
URL = {https://drops.dagstuhl.de/entities/document/10.4230/LIPIcs.APPROX/RANDOM.2022.18},
URN = {urn:nbn:de:0030-drops-171406},
doi = {10.4230/LIPIcs.APPROX/RANDOM.2022.18},
annote = {Keywords: adjacency labelling, informative labelling, distance sketching, adjacency sketching, communication complexity}
}