David Rasmussen Lolck

2papers

2 Papers

8.4DSMay 11
Static to Dynamic Correlation Clustering

Nairen Cao, Vincent Cohen-Addad, Euiwoong Lee et al.

Correlation clustering is a well-studied problem, first proposed by Bansal, Blum, and Chawla [Mach. Learn. '04]. The input is an unweighted, undirected graph. The problem is to cluster the vertices so as to minimize the number of edges between vertices in different clusters and missing edges between vertices inside the same cluster. This problem has a wide application in data mining and machine learning. We introduce a general framework that transforms existing static correlation clustering algorithms into fully-dynamic ones that work against an adaptive adversary. We show how to apply our framework to known efficient correlation clustering algorithms, starting from the classic 3-approximate Pivot algorithm from Ailon, Charikar and Newman [JACM'08]. Applied to the most recent sublinear $1.485$-approximation algorithm from Cao, Cohen-Addad, Lee, Li, Lolck, Newman, Thorup, Vogl, Yan and Zhang [STOC'25], we get a $1.485$-approximation fully-dynamic algorithm that works with worst-case constant update time. The original static algorithm gets its approximation factor with constant probability, and we get the same against an adaptive adversary in the sense that for any given update step, not known to our algorithm, our solution is a $1.485$-approximation with constant probability when we reach this update. Most of previous dynamic algorithms, including the celebrated result from Behnezhad, Charikar, Ma and Tan [FOCS'19], had approximation factors around $3$ in expectation, and they could only handle an oblivious adversary. A recent algorithm by Braverman, Dharangutte, Pai, Shah, and Wang [AISTATS'25] could handle an adaptive adversary, but it has a large unspecified constant approximation ratio. This contrasts with our general transformation, which works with all the best approximation factors known for the static case.

3.3DSMar 12
Pivot based correlation clustering in the presence of good clusters

David Rasmussen Lolck, Mikkel Thorup, Shuyi Yan

The classic pivot based clustering algorithm of Ailon, Charikar and Chawla [JACM'08] is factor 3, but all concrete examples showing that it is no better than 3 are based on some very good clusters, e.g., a complete graph minus a matching. By removing all good clusters before we make each pivot step, we show that this improves the approximation ratio to $2.9991$. To aid in this, we also show how our proposed algorithm performs on synthetic datasets, where the algorithm performs remarkably well, and shows improvements over both the algorithm for locating good clusters and the classic pivot algorithm.