Multi-Priority Graph Sparsification
Abstract
A \emph{sparsification} of a given graph is a sparser graph (typically a subgraph) which aims to approximate or preserve some property of . Examples of sparsifications include but are not limited to spanning trees, Steiner trees, spanners, emulators, and distance preservers. Each vertex has the same priority in all of these problems. However, real-world graphs typically assign different ``priorities'' or ``levels'' to different vertices, in which higher-priority vertices require higher-quality connectivity between them. Multi-priority variants of the Steiner tree problem have been studied in prior literature but this generalization is much less studied for other sparsification problems. In this paper, we define a generalized multi-priority problem and present a rounding-up approach that can be used for a variety of graph sparsifications. Our analysis provides a systematic way to compute approximate solutions to multi-priority variants of a wide range of graph sparsification problems given access to a single-priority subroutine.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2301.12563,
title = {Multi-Priority Graph Sparsification},
author = {Reyan Ahmed and Keaton Hamm and Stephen Kobourov and Mohammad Javad Latifi Jebelli and Faryad Darabi Sahneh and Richard Spence},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2301.12563},
year = {2023}
}