English

Parallel Peeling Algorithms

Data Structures and Algorithms 2014-08-04 v5

Abstract

The analysis of several algorithms and data structures can be framed as a peeling process on a random hypergraph: vertices with degree less than k are removed until there are no vertices of degree less than k left. The remaining hypergraph is known as the k-core. In this paper, we analyze parallel peeling processes, where in each round, all vertices of degree less than k are removed. It is known that, below a specific edge density threshold, the k-core is empty with high probability. We show that, with high probability, below this threshold, only (log log n)/log(k-1)(r-1) + O(1) rounds of peeling are needed to obtain the empty k-core for r-uniform hypergraphs. Interestingly, we show that above this threshold, Omega(log n) rounds of peeling are required to find the non-empty k-core. Since most algorithms and data structures aim to peel to an empty k-core, this asymmetry appears fortunate. We verify the theoretical results both with simulation and with a parallel implementation using graphics processing units (GPUs). Our implementation provides insights into how to structure parallel peeling algorithms for efficiency in practice.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1302.7014,
  title  = {Parallel Peeling Algorithms},
  author = {Jiayang Jiang and Michael Mitzenmacher and Justin Thaler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1302.7014},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

Appears in SPAA 2014. Minor typo corrections relative to previous version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:34:01.250Z