Dynamic programming on bipartite tree decompositions
We revisit a graph width parameter that we dub bipartite treewidth, along with its associated graph decomposition that we call bipartite tree decomposition. Bipartite treewidth can be seen as a common generalization of treewidth and the odd cycle transversal number. Intuitively, a bipartite tree dec...
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Zusammenfassung: | We revisit a graph width parameter that we dub bipartite treewidth, along
with its associated graph decomposition that we call bipartite tree
decomposition. Bipartite treewidth can be seen as a common generalization of
treewidth and the odd cycle transversal number. Intuitively, a bipartite tree
decomposition is a tree decomposition whose bags induce almost bipartite graphs
and whose adhesions contain at most one vertex from the bipartite part of any
other bag, while the width of such decomposition measures how far the bags are
from being bipartite. Adapted from a tree decomposition originally defined by
Demaine, Hajiaghayi, and Kawarabayashi [SODA 2010] and explicitly defined by
Tazari [Th. Comp. Sci. 2012], bipartite treewidth appears to play a crucial
role for solving problems related to odd-minors, which have recently attracted
considerable attention. As a first step toward a theory for solving these
problems efficiently, the main goal of this paper is to develop dynamic
programming techniques to solve problems on graphs of small bipartite
treewidth. For such graphs, we provide a number of para-NP-completeness
results, FPT-algorithms, and XP-algorithms, as well as several open problems.
In particular, we show that $K_t$-Subgraph-Cover, Weighted Vertex
Cover/Independent Set, Odd Cycle Transversal, and Maximum Weighted Cut are
$FPT$ parameterized by bipartite treewidth. We provide the following complexity
dichotomy when $H$ is a 2-connected graph, for each of $H$-Subgraph-Packing,
$H$-Induced-Packing, $H$-Scattered-Packing, and $H$-Odd-Minor-Packing problem:
if $H$ is bipartite, then the problem is para-NP-complete parameterized by
bipartite treewidth while, if $H$ is non-bipartite, then it is solvable in
XP-time. We define 1-${\cal H}$-treewidth by replacing the bipartite graph
class by any class ${\cal H}$. Most of the technology developed here works for
this more general parameter. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2309.07754 |