Edge-Cut Width: An Algorithmically Driven Analogue of Treewidth Based on Edge Cuts

February 28, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science

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Authors Cornelius Brand, Esra Ceylan, Christian Hatschka, Robert Ganian, Viktoriia Korchemna arXiv ID 2202.13661 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Cross-listed cs.CC Citations 11 Venue International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Decompositional parameters such as treewidth are commonly used to obtain fixed-parameter algorithms for NP-hard graph problems. For problems that are W[1]-hard parameterized by treewidth, a natural alternative would be to use a suitable analogue of treewidth that is based on edge cuts instead of vertex separators. While tree-cut width has been coined as such an analogue of treewidth for edge cuts, its algorithmic applications have often led to disappointing results: out of twelve problems where one would hope for fixed-parameter tractability parameterized by an edge-cut based analogue to treewidth, eight were shown to be W[1]-hard parameterized by tree-cut width. As our main contribution, we develop an edge-cut based analogue to treewidth called edge-cut width. Edge-cut width is, intuitively, based on measuring the density of cycles passing through a spanning tree of the graph. Its benefits include not only a comparatively simple definition, but mainly that it has interesting algorithmic properties: it can be computed by a fixed-parameter algorithm, and it yields fixed-parameter algorithms for all the aforementioned problems where tree-cut width failed to do so.
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