Lossy Kernelization for (Implicit) Hitting Set Problems
Abstract
We re-visit the complexity of kernelization for the -Hitting Set problem. This is a classic problem in Parameterized Complexity, which encompasses several other of the most well-studied problems in this field, such as Vertex Cover, Feedback Vertex Set in Tournaments (FVST) and Cluster Vertex Deletion (CVD). In fact, -Hitting Set encompasses any deletion problem to a hereditary property that can be characterized by a finite set of forbidden induced subgraphs. With respect to bit size, the kernelization complexity of -Hitting Set is essentially settled: there exists a kernel with bits ( sets and elements) and this it tight by the result of Dell and van Melkebeek [STOC 2010, JACM 2014]. Still, the question of whether there exists a kernel for -Hitting Set with fewer elements has remained one of the most major open problems~in~Kernelization. In this paper, we first show that if we allow the kernelization to be lossy with a qualitatively better loss than the best possible approximation ratio of polynomial time approximation algorithms, then one can obtain kernels where the number of elements is linear for every fixed . Further, based on this, we present our main result: we show that there exist approximate Turing kernelizations for -Hitting Set that even beat the established bit-size lower bounds for exact kernelizations -- in fact, we use a constant number of oracle calls, each with ``near linear'' () bit size, that is, almost the best one could hope for. Lastly, for two special cases of implicit 3-Hitting set, namely, FVST and CVD, we obtain the ``best of both worlds'' type of results -- -approximate kernelizations with a linear number of vertices. In terms of size, this substantially improves the exact kernels of Fomin et al. [SODA 2018, TALG 2019], with simpler arguments.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2308.05974,
title = {Lossy Kernelization for (Implicit) Hitting Set Problems},
author = {Fedor V. Fomin and Tien-Nam Le and Daniel Lokshtanov and Saket Saurabh and Stephan Thomasse and Meirav Zehavi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2308.05974},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
Accepted to ESA'23