Julian Stieß

2papers

2 Papers

27.4CCMay 11
When Does Sparsity Help for k-Independent Set in Hypergraphs and Other Boolean CSPs?

Timo Fritsch, Marvin Künnemann, Mirza Redzic et al.

Consider the fundamental task of finding independent sets of (constant) size $k$ in a given $n$-node hypergraph. How is the time complexity affected by the sparsity of the input, i.e., the number of hyperedges $m$? Turán's theorem implies that the problem is trivial if $m=O(n^{2-ε})$ for some $ε> 0$. Above that threshold (i.e., if $m=Θ(n^γ)$ for some $γ\ge 2$), we give a perhaps surprising algorithm with running time $O\left(\min\left\{n^{\fracω{3}k} + m^{k/3}, n^k\right\}\right)$ (for $k$ divisible by 3), which is essentially conditionally optimal for all $γ\ge 2$, assuming the $k$-clique and 3-uniform hyperclique hypotheses (here, $ω<2.372$ denotes the matrix multiplication exponent). In fact, we obtain a more detailed time complexity, sensitive to the arity distribution of the hyperedges. To study such phenomena in more generality, we study the time complexity of finding solutions of (constant) size $k$ in sparse instances of Boolean constraint satisfaction problems, where $n$ and $m$ denote the number of variables and constraints. Our results include an essentially full classification of the influence of sparsity for Boolean constraint families of binary arity. Of particular technical interest is a conditionally tight algorithm for the family consisting of the binary NAND and Implication constraints, with a running time of $Θ(m^{ωk/6 \pm c})$. Further, we identify a large class of constraint families $F$ that exhibits a sharp phase transition: there is a threshold $γ_F$ such that the problem is trivial for $m=O(n^{γ_F-ε})$, but requires essentially brute-force running time $Θ(n^{k\pm c})$ for $m=Ω(n^{γ_F})$, assuming the 3-uniform hyperclique hypothesis. Notably, in many cases the combination of constraints display higher time complexity than either constraint alone.

CCMay 22, 2025
The Role of Regularity in (Hyper-)Clique Detection and Implications for Optimizing Boolean CSPs

Nick Fischer, Marvin Künnemann, Mirza Redžić et al.

Is detecting a $k$-clique in $k$-partite regular (hyper-)graphs as hard as in the general case? Intuition suggests yes, but proving this -- especially for hypergraphs -- poses notable challenges. Concretely, we consider a strong notion of regularity in $h$-uniform hypergraphs, where we essentially require that any subset of at most $h-1$ is incident to a uniform number of hyperedges. Such notions are studied intensively in the combinatorial block design literature. We show that any $f(k)n^{g(k)}$-time algorithm for detecting $k$-cliques in such graphs transfers to an $f'(k)n^{g(k)}$-time algorithm for the general case, establishing a fine-grained equivalence between the $h$-uniform hyperclique hypothesis and its natural regular analogue. Equipped with this regularization result, we then fully resolve the fine-grained complexity of optimizing Boolean constraint satisfaction problems over assignments with $k$ non-zeros. Our characterization depends on the maximum degree $d$ of a constraint function. Specifically, if $d\le 1$, we obtain a linear-time solvable problem, if $d=2$, the time complexity is essentially equivalent to $k$-clique detection, and if $d\ge 3$ the problem requires exhaustive-search time under the 3-uniform hyperclique hypothesis. To obtain our hardness results, the regularization result plays a crucial role, enabling a very convenient approach when applied carefully. We believe that our regularization result will find further applications in the future.