Listing, Verifying and Counting Lowest Common Ancestors in DAGs: Algorithms and Fine-Grained Lower Bounds
The AP-LCA problem asks, given an $n$-node directed acyclic graph (DAG), to compute for every pair of vertices $u$ and $v$ in the DAG a lowest common ancestor (LCA) of $u$ and $v$ if one exists. In this paper we study several interesting variants of AP-LCA, providing both algorithms and fine-grained...
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Zusammenfassung: | The AP-LCA problem asks, given an $n$-node directed acyclic graph (DAG), to
compute for every pair of vertices $u$ and $v$ in the DAG a lowest common
ancestor (LCA) of $u$ and $v$ if one exists. In this paper we study several
interesting variants of AP-LCA, providing both algorithms and fine-grained
lower bounds for them. The lower bounds we obtain are the first conditional
lower bounds for LCA problems higher than $n^{\omega-o(1)}$, where $\omega$ is
the matrix multiplication exponent. Some of our results include:
- In any DAG, we can detect all vertex pairs that have at most two LCAs and
list all of their LCAs in $O(n^\omega)$ time. This algorithm extends a result
of [Kowaluk and Lingas ESA'07] which showed an $\tilde{O}(n^\omega)$ time
algorithm that detects all pairs with a unique LCA in a DAG and outputs their
corresponding LCAs.
- Listing $7$ LCAs per vertex pair in DAGs requires $n^{3-o(1)}$ time under
the popular assumption that 3-uniform 5-hyperclique detection requires
$n^{5-o(1)}$ time. This is surprising since essentially cubic time is
sufficient to list all LCAs (if $\omega=2$).
- Counting the number of LCAs for every vertex pair in a DAG requires
$n^{3-o(1)}$ time under the Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis, and
$n^{\omega(1,2,1)-o(1)}$ time under the $4$-Clique hypothesis. This shows that
the algorithm of [Echkardt, M\"{u}hling and Nowak ESA'07] for listing all LCAs
for every pair of vertices is likely optimal.
- Given a DAG and a vertex $w_{u,v}$ for every vertex pair $u,v$, verifying
whether all $w_{u,v}$ are valid LCAs requires $n^{2.5-o(1)}$ time assuming
3-uniform 4-hyperclique requires $n^{4 - o(1)}$ time. This defies the common
intuition that verification is easier than computation since returning some LCA
per vertex pair can be solved in $O(n^{2.447})$ time [Grandoni et al. SODA'21]. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2204.10932 |