Using TPA to count linear extensions
Abstract
A linear extension of a poset is a permutation of the elements of the set that respects the partial order. Let denote the number of linear extensions. It is a #P complete problem to determine exactly for an arbitrary poset, and so randomized approximation algorithms that draw randomly from the set of linear extensions are used. In this work, the set of linear extensions is embedded in a larger state space with a continuous parameter ?. The introduction of a continuous parameter allows for the use of a more efficient method for approximating called TPA. Our primary result is that it is possible to sample from this continuous embedding in time that as fast or faster than the best known methods for sampling uniformly from linear extensions. For a poset containing elements, this means we can approximate to within a factor of with probability at least using an expected number of random bits and comparisons in the poset which is at most
Cite
@article{arxiv.1010.4981,
title = {Using TPA to count linear extensions},
author = {Jacqueline Banks and Scott Garrabrant and Mark L. Huber and Anne Perizzolo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1010.4981},
year = {2017}
}
Comments
12 pages, 4 algorithms