Message passing for the coloring problem: Gallager meets Alon and Kahale
Abstract
Message passing algorithms are popular in many combinatorial optimization problems. For example, experimental results show that {\em survey propagation} (a certain message passing algorithm) is effective in finding proper -colorings of random graphs in the near-threshold regime. In 1962 Gallager introduced the concept of Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) codes, and suggested a simple decoding algorithm based on message passing. In 1994 Alon and Kahale exhibited a coloring algorithm and proved its usefulness for finding a -coloring of graphs drawn from a certain planted-solution distribution over -colorable graphs. In this work we show an interpretation of Alon and Kahale's coloring algorithm in light of Gallager's decoding algorithm, thus showing a connection between the two problems - coloring and decoding. This also provides a rigorous evidence for the usefulness of the message passing paradigm for the graph coloring problem. Our techniques can be applied to several other combinatorial optimization problems and networking-related issues.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0710.3928,
title = {Message passing for the coloring problem: Gallager meets Alon and Kahale},
author = {Sonny Ben-Shimon and Dan Vilenchik},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0710.3928},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
11 pages