Improved Approximation and Scalability for Fair Max-Min Diversification

January 18, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on Database Theory

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Authors Raghavendra Addanki, Andrew McGregor, Alexandra Meliou, Zafeiria Moumoulidou arXiv ID 2201.06678 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Citations 18 Venue International Conference on Database Theory Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Given an $n$-point metric space $(\mathcal{X},d)$ where each point belongs to one of $m=O(1)$ different categories or groups and a set of integers $k_1, \ldots, k_m$, the fair Max-Min diversification problem is to select $k_i$ points belonging to category $i\in [m]$, such that the minimum pairwise distance between selected points is maximized. The problem was introduced by Moumoulidou et al. [ICDT 2021] and is motivated by the need to down-sample large data sets in various applications so that the derived sample achieves a balance over diversity, i.e., the minimum distance between a pair of selected points, and fairness, i.e., ensuring enough points of each category are included. We prove the following results: 1. We first consider general metric spaces. We present a randomized polynomial time algorithm that returns a factor $2$-approximation to the diversity but only satisfies the fairness constraints in expectation. Building upon this result, we present a $6$-approximation that is guaranteed to satisfy the fairness constraints up to a factor $1-Ξ΅$ for any constant $Ξ΅$. We also present a linear time algorithm returning an $m+1$ approximation with exact fairness. The best previous result was a $3m-1$ approximation. 2. We then focus on Euclidean metrics. We first show that the problem can be solved exactly in one dimension. For constant dimensions, categories and any constant $Ξ΅>0$, we present a $1+Ξ΅$ approximation algorithm that runs in $O(nk) + 2^{O(k)}$ time where $k=k_1+\ldots+k_m$. We can improve the running time to $O(nk)+ poly(k)$ at the expense of only picking $(1-Ξ΅) k_i$ points from category $i\in [m]$. Finally, we present algorithms suitable to processing massive data sets including single-pass data stream algorithms and composable coresets for the distributed processing.
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