Sang-il Oum

2papers

2 Papers

26.1DSMay 14
Branch-width of represented matroids in matrix multiplication time

Mujin Choi, Tuukka Korhonen, Sang-il Oum

For an $n$-element matroid $M$ given by an $n \times n$ matrix representation over a finite field $\mathbb F$ and an integer $k$, we present an $(O_{k,\mathbb F}(n^2)+O(n^ω))$-time algorithm that either finds a branch-decomposition of $M$ of width at most $k$, or confirms that the branch-width of $M$ is more than $k$, where $ω< 2.3714$ is the matrix multiplication exponent, and the $O_{k,\mathbb F}(\cdot)$-notation hides factors that depend on $k$ and $\mathbb F$ in a computable manner. All previous algorithms including Hliněný and Oum [SIAM J. Comput. (2008)] and Jeong, Kim, and Oum [SIAM J. Discrete Math. (2021)] run in at least $Ω(n^3)$ time. Moreover, if the input matrix representation is given by a standard form, our algorithm runs in $O_{k,\mathbb F}(n^2)$-time, since $O(n^ω)$-time is only needed for finding a standard form of the input matrix. When $M$ is given by an $m \times n$ matrix, the overhead for finding a standard form is $O(mn \min(m,n)^{ω-2})$. As corollaries, we obtain faster algorithms for rank-width of directed graphs and path-width of matroids represented over a fixed finite field. Furthermore, we also present an approximation algorithm for finding branch-width that works on infinite fields provided that the input matrix is of a standard form and contains a bounded number of distinct values of entries. To suggest that our algorithm is optimal, we observe that for every field $\mathbb F$, deciding whether the branch-width of a matroid represented over $\mathbb F$ is $0$ is as hard as deciding whether a square matrix over $\mathbb F$ is singular. Under the assumption that singularity testing requires $Ω(n^ω)$-time, this implies that the overhead of $O(n^ω)$ is unavoidable. We also show strengthenings of this observation to rule out some approximations under this assumption.

14.8COMar 11
Polynomial-size encoding of all cuts of small value in integer-valued symmetric submodular functions

Sang-il Oum, Marek Sokołowski

We study connectivity functions, that is, integer-valued symmetric submodular functions on a finite ground set attaining $0$ on the empty set. For a connectivity function $f$ on an $n$-element set $V$ and an integer $k\ge 0$, we show that the family of all sets $X\subseteq V$ with $f(X)=k$ admits a polynomial-size representation: it can be described by a list of at most $O(n^{4k})$ items, each consisting of a set to be included, another set to be excluded, and a partition of remaining elements, such that the union of some members of the partition and the set to be included are precisely all sets $X$ with $f(X)=k$. We also give an algorithm that constructs this representation in time $O(n^{2k+7}γ+n^{2k+8}+n^{4k+2})$, where $γ$ is the oracle time to evaluate $f$. This generalizes the low rank structure theorem of Bojańczyk, Pilipczuk, Przybyszewski, Sokołowski, and Stamoulis [Low rank MSO, arXiv, 2025] on cut-rank functions on graphs to general connectivity functions. As an application, for fixed $k$, we obtain a polynomial-time algorithm for finding a set $A$ with $f(A)=k$ and a prescribed cardinality constraint on $A$.