When do homomorphism counts help in query algorithms?
Abstract
A query algorithm based on homomorphism counts is a procedure for determining whether a given instance satisfies a property by counting homomorphisms between the given instance and finitely many predetermined instances. In a left query algorithm, we count homomorphisms from the predetermined instances to the given instance, while in a right query algorithm we count homomorphisms from the given instance to the predetermined instances. Homomorphisms are usually counted over the semiring N of non-negative integers; it is also meaningful, however, to count homomorphisms over the Boolean semiring B, in which case the homomorphism count indicates whether or not a homomorphism exists. We first characterize the properties that admit a left query algorithm over B by showing that these are precisely the properties that are both first-order definable and closed under homomorphic equivalence. After this, we turn attention to a comparison between left query algorithms over B and left query algorithms over N. In general, there are properties that admit a left query algorithm over N but not over B. The main result of this paper asserts that if a property is closed under homomorphic equivalence, then that property admits a left query algorithm over B if and only if it admits a left query algorithm over N. In other words and rather surprisingly, homomorphism counts over N do not help as regards properties that are closed under homomorphic equivalence. Finally, we characterize the properties that admit both a left query algorithm over B and a right query algorithm over B.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2304.06294,
title = {When do homomorphism counts help in query algorithms?},
author = {Balder ten Cate and Víctor Dalmau and Phokion G. Kolaitis and Wei-Lin Wu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2304.06294},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
21 pages