Guillaume Ducoffe

2papers

2 Papers

20.6COApr 12
$α_i$-Metric Graphs: Hyperbolicity

Feodor F. Dragan, Guillaume Ducoffe

A graph is called $α_i$-metric ($i \in {\cal N}$) if it satisfies the following $α_i$-metric property for every vertices $u, w, v$ and $x$: if a shortest path between $u$ and $w$ and a shortest path between $x$ and $v$ share a terminal edge $vw$, then $d(u,x) \ge d(u,v) + d(v,x) - i$. The latter is a discrete relaxation of the property that in Euclidean spaces the union of two geodesics sharing a terminal segment must be also a geodesic. Recently in (Dragan & Ducoffe, WG'23) we initiated the study of the algorithmic applications of $α_i$-metric graphs. Our results in this prior work were very similar to those established in (Chepoi et al., SoCG'08) and (Chepoi et al., COCOA'18) for graphs with bounded hyperbolicity. The latter is a heavily studied metric tree-likeness parameter first introduced by Gromov. In this paper, we clarify the relationship between hyperbolicity and the $α_i$-metric property, proving that $α_i$-metric graphs are $f(i)$-hyperbolic for some function $f$ linear in $i$. We give different proofs of this result, using various equivalent definitions to graph hyperbolicity. By contrast, we give simple constructions of $1$-hyperbolic graphs that are not $α_i$-metric for any constant $i$. Finally, in the special case of $i=1$, we prove that $α_1$-metric graphs are $1$-hyperbolic, and the bound is sharp. By doing so, we can answer some questions left open in (Dragan & Ducoffe, WG'23).

33.9DSMay 2
A fine-grained dichotomy for the center problem on Gromov hyperbolic graphs

Guillaume Ducoffe

A vertex in a graph is called central if it minimizes its maximum distance to the other vertices. The radius of a graph $G$ is the largest distance between a central vertex and the other vertices, and it is denoted by $rad(G)$. In the center problem, we are asked to find a central vertex. We study the fine-grained complexity of the center problem on graphs with small Gromov hyperbolicity. Roughly, the Gromov hyperbolicity of a graph represents how close, locally, it is to a tree, from a metric point of view. It has applications in the design of approximation algorithms. In particular, there is a linear-time algorithm that for every $δ$-hyperbolic graph $G$ outputs some vertex at distance at most $rad(G) + 5δ$ to the other vertices [Chepoi et al, SoCG'08]. However, a linear-time algorithm for computing a central vertex is known only for $0$-hyperbolic graphs, whereas its existence was ruled out for $2$-hyperbolic graphs under the Hitting Set Conjecture of [Abboud et al, SODA'16]. Our main contribution in the paper is a linear-time algorithm for computing a central vertex in the class of $\frac 1 2$-hyperbolic graphs. Furthermore, we rule out the existence of such an algorithm for $1$-hyperbolic graphs, under the Hitting Set Conjecture, thus completely settling all the cases left open.