The Projection Games Conjecture and the NP-Hardness of ln n-Approximating Set-Cover
We suggest the research agenda of establishing new hardness of approximation results based on the “projection games conjecture”, i.e., an instantiation of the Sliding Scale Conjecture of Bellare, Goldwasser, Lund and Russell to projection games. We pursue this line of research by establishing a tig...
主要作者: | |
---|---|
其他作者: | |
格式: | 文件 |
语言: | en_US |
出版: |
Springer-Verlag
2014
|
在线阅读: | http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/90484 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5157-8086 |
总结: | We suggest the research agenda of establishing new hardness of approximation results based on the “projection games conjecture”, i.e., an instantiation of the Sliding Scale Conjecture of Bellare, Goldwasser, Lund and Russell to projection games.
We pursue this line of research by establishing a tight NP-hardness result for the Set-Cover problem. Specifically, we show that under the projection games conjecture (in fact, under a quantitative version of the conjecture that is only slightly beyond the reach of current techniques), it is NP-hard to approximate Set-Cover on instances of size N to within (1 − α)ln N for arbitrarily small α > 0. Our reduction establishes a tight trade-off between the approximation accuracy α and the time required for the approximation 2[superscript NΩ(α)], assuming Sat requires exponential time.
The reduction is obtained by modifying Feige’s reduction. The latter only provides a lower bound of 2[superscript NΩ(α/loglogN)] on the time required for (1 − α)ln N-approximating Set-Cover assuming Sat requires exponential time (note that N[superscript 1/loglogN] = N[superscript o(1)]). The modification uses a combinatorial construction of a bipartite graph in which any coloring of the first side that does not use a color for more than a small fraction of the vertices, makes most vertices on the other side have their neighbors all colored in different colors. |
---|