Optimal Algorithms for Bounded Weighted Edit Distance
May 11, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· π IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
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Authors
Alejandro Cassis, Tomasz Kociumaka, Philip Wellnitz
arXiv ID
2305.06659
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Citations
12
Venue
IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
The edit distance of two strings is the minimum number of insertions, deletions, and substitutions of characters needed to transform one string into the other. The textbook dynamic-programming algorithm computes the edit distance of two length-$n$ strings in $O(n^2)$ time, which is optimal up to subpolynomial factors under SETH. An established way of circumventing this hardness is to consider the bounded setting, where the running time is parameterized by the edit distance $k$. A celebrated algorithm by Landau and Vishkin (JCSS '88) achieves time $O(n + k^2)$, which is optimal as a function of $n$ and $k$. Most practical applications rely on a more general weighted edit distance, where each edit has a weight depending on its type and the involved characters from the alphabet $Ξ£$. This is formalized through a weight function $w : Ξ£\cup\{\varepsilon\}\timesΞ£\cup\{\varepsilon\}\to\mathbb{R}$ normalized so that $w(a,a)=0$ and $w(a,b)\geq 1$ for all $a,b \in Ξ£\cup\{\varepsilon\}$ with $a \neq b$; the goal is to find an alignment of the two strings minimizing the total weight of edits. The $O(n^2)$-time algorithm supports this setting seamlessly, but only very recently, Das, Gilbert, Hajiaghayi, Kociumaka, and Saha (STOC '23) gave the first non-trivial algorithm for the bounded version, achieving time $O(n + k^5)$. While this running time is linear for $k\le n^{1/5}$, it is still very far from the bound $O(n+k^2)$ achievable in the unweighted setting. In this paper, we essentially close this gap by showing both an improved $\tilde O(n+\sqrt{nk^3})$-time algorithm and, more surprisingly, a matching lower bound: Conditioned on the All-Pairs Shortest Paths (APSP) hypothesis, our running time is optimal for $\sqrt{n}\le k\le n$ (up to subpolynomial factors). This is the first separation between the complexity of the weighted and unweighted edit distance problems.
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