Locally Rainbow Paths
We introduce the algorithmic problem of finding a locally rainbow path of length $\ell$ connecting two distinguished vertices $s$ and $t$ in a vertex-colored directed graph. Herein, a path is locally rainbow if between any two visits of equally colored vertices, the path traverses consecutively at l...
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Zusammenfassung: | We introduce the algorithmic problem of finding a locally rainbow path of
length $\ell$ connecting two distinguished vertices $s$ and $t$ in a
vertex-colored directed graph. Herein, a path is locally rainbow if between any
two visits of equally colored vertices, the path traverses consecutively at
least $r$ differently colored vertices. This problem generalizes the well-known
problem of finding a rainbow path. It finds natural applications whenever there
are different types of resources that must be protected from overuse, such as
crop sequence optimization or production process scheduling. We show that the
problem is computationally intractable even if $r=2$ or if one looks for a
locally rainbow among the shortest paths. On the positive side, if one looks
for a path that takes only a short detour (i.e., it is slightly longer than the
shortest path) and if $r$ is small, the problem can be solved efficiently.
Indeed, the running time of the respective algorithm is near-optimal unless the
ETH fails. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2402.12905 |