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Title: Collective Additive Tree Spanners of Homogeneously Orderable Graphs


1
Collective Additive Tree Spanners of
Homogeneously Orderable Graphs
  • F.F. Dragan, C. Yan and Y. Xiang
  • Kent State University, USA

2
Well-known Tree t -Spanner Problem
  • Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
    integers t,r.
  • Does G admit a spanning tree T (V,E) such that

(a multiplicative tree t-spanner of G)
or
(an additive tree r-spanner of G)?
multiplicative tree 4-, additive tree 3-spanner
of G
G
T
3
Some known results for the tree spanner problem
(mostly multiplicative case)
  • general graphs CC95
  • t ? 4 is NP-complete. (t3 is still open, t ? 2
    is P)
  • approximation algorithm for general graphs
    EP04
  • O(logn) approximation algorithm
  • chordal graphs BDLL02
  • t ? 4 is NP-complete. (t3 is still open.)
  • planar graphs FK01
  • t? 4 is NP-complete. (t3 is polynomial time
    solvable.)
  • easy to construct for some special families of
    graphs.

4
Well-known Sparse t -Spanner Problem
Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
integers t,m,r. Does G admit a spanning graph H
(V,E) with E ? m s.t.
(a multiplicative t-spanner of G)
or
(an additive r-spanner of G)?
H
G
multiplicative 2- and additive 1-spanner of G
5
Some known results for sparse spanner problems
  • general graphs
  • t, m?1 is NP-complete PS89
  • multiplicative (2k-1)-spanner with n11/k edges
    TZ01, BS03
  • n-vertex chordal graphs (multiplicative case)
    PS89
  • (G is chordal if it has no chordless cycles
    of length 3)
  • multiplicative 3-spanner with O(n logn) edges
  • multiplicative 5-spanner with 2n-2 edges
  • n-vertex c-chordal graphs (additive case)
    CDY03, DYL04
  • (G is c-chordal if it has no chordless cycles
    of length c)
  • additive (c1)-spanner with 2n-2 edges
  • additive (2 ?c/2? )-spanner with n log n edges
  • ? For chordal graphs additive 4-spanner with
    2n-2 edges, additive 2-spanner with n log n edges

6
Collective Additive Tree r -Spanners Problem (a
middle way)
  • Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
    integers ?, r.
  • Does G admit a system of ? collective additive
    tree r-spanners T1, T2, T?
    such that

(a system of ? collective additive tree
r-spanners of G )?
surplus
,
collective multiplicative tree t-spanners can be
defined similarly
2 collective additive tree 2-spanners
7
Collective Additive Tree r -Spanners Problem
  • Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
    integers ?, r.
  • Does G admit a system of ? collective additive
    tree r-spanners T1, T2, T?
    such that

(a system of ? collective additive tree
r-spanners of G )?
,
2 collective additive tree 2-spanners
8
Collective Additive Tree r -Spanners Problem
  • Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
    integers ?, r.
  • Does G admit a system of ? collective additive
    tree r-spanners T1, T2, T?
    such that

(a system of ? collective additive tree
r-spanners of G )?
,
2 collective additive tree 2-spanners
9
Collective Additive Tree r -Spanners Problem
  • Given unweighted undirected graph G(V,E) and
    integers ?, r.
  • Does G admit a system of ? collective additive
    tree r-spanners T1, T2, T?
    such that

(a system of ? collective additive tree
r-spanners of G )?
,
,
2 collective additive tree 0-spanners or
multiplicative tree 1-spanners
2 collective additive tree 2-spanners
10
Applications of Collective Tree
Spannersrepresenting complicated graph-distances
with few tree-distances
  • message routing in networks
  • Efficient routing schemes are known for
    trees
  • but not for general graphs. For any two
    nodes, we can route the message between them in
    one of the trees which approximates the distance
    between them.
  • - (? log2n/ log log n)-bit labels,
  • - O(? ) initiation, O(1) decision
  • solution for sparse t-spanner problem
  • If a graph admits a system of ? collective
    additive tree r-spanners, then the graph admits a
    sparse additive r-spanner with at most ?(n-1)
    edges, where n is the number of nodes.

2 collective tree 2-spanners for G
11
Previous results on the collective tree spanners
problem(Dragan, Yan, Lomonosov
SWAT04)(Corneil, Dragan, Köhler, Yan WG05)
  • chordal graphs, chordal bipartite graphs
  • log n collective additive tree 2-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • ?(n1/2) or ?(n) trees necessary to get 1
  • no constant number of trees guaranties 2 (3)
  • circular-arc graphs
  • 2 collective additive tree 2-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • c-chordal graphs
  • log n collective additive tree 2 ?c/2? -spanners
    in polynomial time
  • interval graphs
  • log n collective additive tree 1-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • no constant number of trees guaranties 1

12
Previous results on the collective tree spanners
problem(Dragan, Yan, Corneil WG04)
  • AT-free graphs
  • include interval, permutation, trapezoid,
    co-comparability
  • 2 collective additive tree 2-spanners in linear
    time
  • an additive tree 3-spanner in linear time
    (before)
  • graphs with a dominating shortest path
  • an additive tree 4-spanner in polynomial time
    (before)
  • 2 collective additive tree 3-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • 5 collective additive tree 2-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • graphs with asteroidal number an(G)k
  • k(k-1)/2 collective additive tree 4-spanners in
    polynomial time
  • k(k-1) collective additive tree 3-spanners in
    polynomial time

13
Previous results on the collective tree spanners
problem(Gupta, Kumar,Rastogi SICOMP05)
  • the only paper (before) on collective
    multiplicative tree spanners in weighted planar
    graphs
  • any weighted planar graph admits a system of
    O(log n) collective multiplicative tree
    3-spanners
  • they are called there the tree-covers.
  • it follows from (Corneil, Dragan, Köhler, Yan
    WG05) that
  • no constant number of trees guaranties c (for
    any constant c)

14
Some results on collective additive tree spanners
of weighted graphs with bounded parameters
(Dragan, Yan ISAAC04)
to get 0
No constant number of trees guaranties r for any
constant r even for outer-planar graphs
to get 1
  • w is the length of a longest edge in G

15
Some results on collective additive tree spanners
of weighted c-chordal graphs (Dragan, Yan
ISAAC04)
No constant number of trees guaranties r for any
constant r even for weakly chordal graphs
16
(This paper)Homogeneously orderable Graphs
  • A graph G is homogeneously orderable if G has an
    h-extremal ordering Brandstädt et.al.95.
  • Equivalently A graph G is homogeneously
    orderable if and only if the graph L(D(G)) of G
    is chordal and each maximal two-set of G is
    join-split.
  • L(D(G)) is the intersection graph of D(G).
  • Two-set is a set of vertices at pair-wise
    distance 2.

join-split
17
Hierarchy of Homogeneously Orderable Graphs (HOGs)
18
Our results on Collective additive tree spanners
of n-vertex homogeneously orderable graphs
19
To get 1 one needs trees
trivial
n-1 BFS-trees
trees
20
Our results on Collective additive tree spanners
of n-vertex homogeneously orderable graphs
21
Layering and Clustering
  • The projection of each cluster is a two-set.
  • The connected components of projections are
    two-sets and have a common neighbor down.

22
Additive Tree 3-spanner
Linear Time
23
Our results on Collective additive tree spanners
of n-vertex homogeneously orderable graphs
24
H and H2
HOG
Chordal
17
15
16
13
14
12
25
11
23
1
21
19
7
8
2
3
24
22
5
9
4
10
18
20
6
25
H2 (chordal graph) and its balanced decomposition
tree
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12
17
15
16
13
14
12
25
11
8, 10
23
13, 14, 15, 16, 17
18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
1
21
19
8
7
2
3
24
22
4
5
9
10
18
20
25
6
26
Constructing Local Spanning Trees for H
  • For each layer of the decomposition tree,
    construct local spanning trees of H (shortest
    path trees in the subgraph).
  • Here, we use the second layer for illustration.

17
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12
15
16
13
14
12
25
11
23
8, 10
13, 14, 15, 16, 17
18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
1
21
19
7
8
2
3
24
22
5
9
4
10
18
20
25
6
27
Local Additive Tree 2-spanner
Theorem
must hold
28
Our results on Collective additive tree spanners
of n-vertex homogeneously orderable graphs
One tree cannot give 2
29
No constant number d of trees can guarantee
additive stretch factor 2
root
gadget
clique
30
No constant number d of trees can guarantee
additive stretch factor 2
Tree of gadgets



The depth is a function of d
31
Open questions and future plans
  • Given a graph G(V, E) and two integers ? and r,
    what is the complexity of finding a system of ?
    collective additive (multiplicative) tree
    r-spanner for G? (Clearly, for most ? and r, it
    is an NP-complete problem.)
  • Find better trade-offs between ? and r for planar
    graphs, genus g graphs and graphs w/o an h-minor.
  • We may consider some other graph classes. Whats
    the optimal ? for each r?
  • More applications of collective tree spanner

32
  • Thank You
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