Sublinear-Time Algorithms for Computing & Embedding Gap Edit Distance

July 24, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science

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Authors Tomasz Kociumaka, Barna Saha arXiv ID 2007.12762 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Citations 18 Venue IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
In this paper, we design new sublinear-time algorithms for solving the gap edit distance problem and for embedding edit distance to Hamming distance. For the gap edit distance problem, we give an $\tilde{O}(\frac{n}{k}+k^2)$-time greedy algorithm that distinguishes between length-$n$ input strings with edit distance at most $k$ and those with edit distance exceeding $(3k+5)k$. This is an improvement and a simplification upon the result of Goldenberg, Krauthgamer, and Saha [FOCS 2019], where the $k$ vs $Θ(k^2)$ gap edit distance problem is solved in $\tilde{O}(\frac{n}{k}+k^3)$ time. We further generalize our result to solve the $k$ vs $k'$ gap edit distance problem in time $\tilde{O}(\frac{nk}{k'}+k^2+ \frac{k^2}{k'}\sqrt{nk})$, strictly improving upon the previously known bound $\tilde{O}(\frac{nk}{k'}+k^3)$. Finally, we show that if the input strings do not have long highly periodic substrings, then already the $k$ vs $(1+Ρ)k$ gap edit distance problem can be solved in sublinear time. Specifically, if the strings contain no substring of length $\ell$ with period at most $2k$, then the running time we achieve is $\tilde{O}(\frac{n}{Ρ^2 k}+k^2\ell)$. We further give the first sublinear-time probabilistic embedding of edit distance to Hamming distance. For any parameter $p$, our $\tilde{O}(\frac{n}{p})$-time procedure yields an embedding with distortion $O(kp)$, where $k$ is the edit distance of the original strings. Specifically, the Hamming distance of the resultant strings is between $\frac{k-p+1}{p+1}$ and $O(k^2)$ with good probability. This generalizes the linear-time embedding of Chakraborty, Goldenberg, and Koucký [STOC 2016], where the resultant Hamming distance is between $\frac k2$ and $O(k^2)$. Our algorithm is based on a random walk over samples, which we believe will find other applications in sublinear-time algorithms.
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