Équipe thématique Calcul distribué
Équipe thématique Théorie et algorithmique des graphes
Le mardi à 15h, salle 3052 ou en ligne
Le calendrier des séances (format iCal).
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Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 29 avril 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Nicolas Trotignon (ENS Lyon) Pathographs and some undecidability results
We consider the problem whose instance is a pathgraph G and a finite set of graphs F. The question is whether there exists a realization of G that contains no graph from F as an induced subgraph. We prove that this problem is undecidable (by reducing the Wang tiles problem to it). This result has several motivations. Pathographs are flexible enough to encode several graph containment problems. Some of them seems easy though it not known whether an algorithm exists for them, and our result show that this is not trivial. Also, many proofs in structural graph theory relies on a fact that some pathograph cannot be realized without introducing a forbidden induced subgraphs, so our result show that automatic provers for such lemmas do not exists in general.
This a joint work with Daniel Carter.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 15 avril 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Florian Horn (IRIF) Théorie des systèmes de contrôle de version
Ces travaux ont été réalisés avec Laurent Bulteau (LIGM, CNRS), Pierre-Yves David (Octobus), et Euxane Tran-Girard (LIGM, Octobus).
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 8 avril 2025, 15 heures 30, 3052
Laurent Viennot (INRIA et IRIF) Certificates in P and Subquadratic-Time Computation of Radius, Diameter, and all Eccentricities in Graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 1 avril 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Clara Marcille (Bordeaux) Graph Irregularity via Edge Deletions
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 mars 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Diana Sasaki (Rio de Janeiro State University) The total coloring problem and its variants
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 mars 2025, 14 heures, 3052
Pascal Préa (École Centrale Méditerranée) A simple & optimal algorithm for strict circular seriation
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 4 mars 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Giannos Stamoulis (IRIF) Faster diameter computation in graphs of bounded Euler genus
Joint work with Kacper Kluk, Marcin Pilipczuk, and Michał Pilipczuk.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 février 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Narges Tavassoli (CRIStAL, Université de Lille) The Parameterized Complexity of Local Search for MOTSP
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 18 février 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Bernadette Charron-Bost (Ens Paris) Know your audience (Communication models and function computability in anonymous networks)
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 février 2025, 15 heures, 3052
François Pirot (Saclay) Tight asymptotic bounds for odd- and pcf-colourings of graphs of bounded maximum degree
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 4 février 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Allen Ibiapina (IRIF) Cycles in Temporal Graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 janvier 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Gil Puig I Surroca (Université Paris Dauphine) Endomorphism monoids of regular graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 21 janvier 2025, 11 heures, 1014
Hugo Jacob (LIRMM, Montpellier) On the structure of twin-width 1 graphs
Joint work with Jungho Ahn, Noleen Köhler, Christophe Paul, Amadeus Reinald, and Sebastian Wiederrecht.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 14 janvier 2025, 15 heures, 3052
Xueliang Li (Nankai University, China) Circular flows and group connectivity of graphs
Joint work with Jiaao Li and Meiling Wang.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 3 décembre 2024, 15 heures, 3052
Daniela Bubboloni (Università degli Studi di Firenze) Paths and flows for centrality measures in networks
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 novembre 2024, 15 heures, 3052
Students Presenting At Jga (IRIF and LIP6) JGA training seminar
Hector Buffière: Shallow vertex minors, stability, and dependence (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/579556)
Renaud Torfs: Biclique maximum des graphes Star_1,2,3-free sans jumeau et des graphes de bimodularwidth bornée (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/579711)
Guillaume Aubian: Une construction de graphes de grand nombre chromatique sans triangle (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/581565)
Jules Bouton Popper: Comment rendre un graphe temporel connecté ? (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/581190)
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 5 novembre 2024, 1 heures 15, 3052
Students Presenting At Jga (IRIF) JGA training seminar
Cyril Pujol: Extremal sizes of cores of products of graphs (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/578775)
Etienne Objois: Constructing tree-based linear oblivious routings (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/581340)
Hugo Demaret: Nombre domatique fractionnaire et degre minimum (abstract: https://jga2024.sciencesconf.org/576944)
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 18 juin 2024, 14 heures, 3052
Florian Galliot (LaBRI, Université Bordeaux) Maker-Breaker positional games
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 30 avril 2024, 15 heures 15, 3052 Sophie Germain
Gianlorenzo D'Angelo (GSSI) Sparse Temporal Spanners with Low Stretch
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 30 avril 2024, 11 heures, 1016 Sophie Germain
Alexis Baudin (LIP6) Faster maximal clique enumeration in large real-world link streams
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 26 avril 2024, 14 heures, 1020
Dimitri Watel (ENSIIE) Edit distance to a linegraph, application to network reconstruction
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 23 avril 2024, 14 heures, 3052 Sophie Germain
Cléophée Robin (G-Scop) Covering some vertices with paths and a Hamiltonian degree condition for tough graphs
In 1973, Chvàtal conjecture the following : There exists a constant t such that every t-tough graphs is Hamiltonian.
Let t be a positive integer. A graph G with degree sequence d_1,d_2,…,d_n is P(t) (t being a positive integer) If for all i, t ≤ i <n/2, d_i ≤ i ⇒ d_{n−i+t} ≥ n−i. In 1995, Hoàng conjecture the following : If G is t-tough and P(t) then G is Hamiltonian. Hoàng prove that it is true for t ≤ 3. In 2023, Hoang and Robin proved that it is also true for t ≤ 4 by extending the Closure Lemma due to Bondy and Chvàtal into a version for tough graphs.
We prove that it is true for t≤7 for n large enough. To do so, we prove a lemma about covering some vertices of a graph with a bounded number of paths.
This is joint work with Chình T. Hoàng and Paul Dorbec.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 26 mars 2024, 14 heures, 3052
Ambroise Baril (Université de Lorraine) On the parameterized complexity of the non-hereditary relaxations of Clique
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 mars 2024, 15 heures 15, Room 3052
Michel Habib On some recursive linear time algorithms on graphs
We present a general scheme to design linear time recursive algorithm on graphs. As an application I will detail an algorithm that computes the modular decomposition tree of an undirected graph in linear time. This algorithm was presented at Icalp 08 (12 pages) and the full is version (42 pages) is now available at https://arxiv.org/abs/0710.3901
To this aim I will present the combinatorial structures needed. In particular the linear time behavior heavily relies on the recursive structure of a nice graph search : Lexicographic Breadth First Search (LexBFS).
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 30 janvier 2024, 14 heures, Room 3052
Giannos Stamoulis (Institute of Informatics, University of Warsaw, Poland) Descriptive and structural conditions towards optimal algorithms
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 26 janvier 2024, 14 heures 15, 3058 SG
Daniel Vaz (LAMSADE, Université Paris Dauphine–PSL) Good and Efficient Approximation for the Sparsest Cut Problem in Bounded-Treewidth Graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 23 janvier 2024, 14 heures, 1003 Sophie Germain
Thomas Suzan (G-SCOP laboratory, UGA) Graph homomorphisms, reconfiguration and topology
We consider graph homomorphisms from the point of view of reconfiguration: Given two graphs G and H, we study a reconfiguration graph Col(G,H) whose vertices are graph homomorphisms, where two graph homomorphisms are adjacent if they differ on a single vertex. For a fixed graph H, we consider the computation complexity of 1) Deciding if there is a path between two homomorphisms in Col(G,H); and 2) Deciding if Col(G,H) is connected.
We show how topological methods can be used in both settings to obtain polynomial algorithms for 1) and hardness results for 2). 1) is joint work with Moritz Mühlenthaler (G-SCOP, UGA) and Benjamin Lévêque (G-SCOP, CNRS). 2) is joint work with Moritz Mühlenthaler and Mark Siggers (KNU, Korea).
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 8 décembre 2023, 15 heures, 1007
Pierre Aboulker (ENS-Paris) Clique number of tournaments
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 10 novembre 2023, 15 heures, 1007
Pournajafi Pegah (College de France) Scott's conjecture for complete graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 20 octobre 2023, 15 heures, 1007
Allen Ibiapina Menger's Theorem and Related Problems in Temporal Graph
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 26 septembre 2023, 15 heures 30, 3052 Sophie Germain
Binh-Minh Bui-Xuan (CNRS, LIP6, UPMC) Efficient algorithms using temporality and geometry on graphs.
Without the consideration of temporality, a good number of width parameters has been introduced in the effort to better understand what lies between cliquewidth (number of different neighbourhoods) and treewidth (total size of neighbourhoods). We can cite rankwidth, bimodule-width, booleanwidth, and matching-width for the first category; and minor-based parameters such as Hajos/Hadwiger number and twinwidth for the second one. However, attempts in extending those parameters to temporal graphs are still scarce in the literature.
Twins in a temporal context would refer to vertices which are substitutes for each other in the solution of a number of classical graph problems, e.g. matching, epidemic spreading, journeys of optimal (temporal) length, and so on. Although most of these problems become NP-hard to optimise on an arbitrary input, we present in this talk an example where reducing a spatiotemporal input into a timeless graph and using both geometric and decomposition properties help in obtaining a PTAS solution. We hope this kind of technique could help in solving problems beyond first order logic when exploiting the conformist nature of twins.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 septembre 2023, 16 heures, 3052
Feodor Dragan And Guillaume Ducoffe alpha_i-Metric Graphs: Radius, Diameter and all Eccentricities
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 septembre 2023, 15 heures, 147 Olympe de Gouges
Éric Colin De Verdière (CNRS, LIGM, Marne-la-Vallée) Embedding graphs into 2-dimensional simplicial complexes
In this talk, we consider an even more general case, in which the target space is a 2-dimensional simplicial complex (a topological space obtained from a graph by attaching a solid triangle to some of its 3-cycles). It turns out that this generalization encompasses some other well known problems, such as the crossing number problem and the planarity number problem (and their generalizations to surfaces). We give an algorithm that is quadratic in the size of the input graph (and exponential in the size of the input complex), independent from the previous algorithms to embed graphs into surfaces. The techniques mix graph theory (branchwidth, excluded grid theorem, dynamic programming) with topology (combinatorial maps of graphs on surfaces).
This is joint work with Thomas Magnard.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 juillet 2023, 15 heures, 146 Olympe de Gouge
Andrea Jimenez (University of Valparaiso, Chile) UPPER BOUND FOR THE CONFLICT-FREE CHROMATIC NUMBER ON CLAW-FREE GRAPHS
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 13 juin 2023, 15 heures, 147 Olympe de Gouges
Anna Gujgiczer (Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary) Circular chromatic number of generalised Mycielski graphs on odd cycles and other quadrangulations of the projective plane
In this talk we present a new, relatively short direct proof for the circular chromatic number, using only a basic notion of algebraic topology, namely the winding number. Then we present another graph family with high odd girth and circular chromatic number 4. This construction is very similar to the generalized Mycielski, but on its first two layers it forms a M$\ddot{o}$bius ladder. We prove the statement about their circular chromatic number with similar techniques. Moreover we present a similar result for a family of signed graphs.
This talk is based on a joint work with Reza Naserasr (Universit´e de Paris, IRIF, CNRS, F-75006, Paris, France), S Rohini (Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India) and S Taruni (Indian Institute of Technology Dharwad, India).
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 16 mai 2023, 14 heures, 147 Olympe de Gouges
Frédéric Meunier (CERMICS) Coloring complements of line graphs.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 9 mai 2023, 15 heures, 147, Salles Olympe de Gouge
Sebastiano Vigna (Università degli Studi di Milano) Monotonicity on undirected networks.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 2 mai 2023, 15 heures 30, ZOOM
Cléophée Robin (Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo, Canada) A Closure Lemma for tough graphs and Hamiltonian degree conditions
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mercredi 26 avril 2023, 15 heures, 147, Salles Olympe de Gouge zoom
Monika Csikos (IRIF) An introduction to VC-dimension
While for simple geometric set systems (e.g. ones induced by half-spaces), one can bound the VC-dimension using elementary arguments, many applications require more complex set systems. A long standing central open problem since 1989 was bounding the VC-dimension of unions and intersections of half-spaces in high dimensions. In collaboration with A. Kupavskii and N. Mustafa, we resolved this problem by providing a tight lower bound in dimensions at least 4.
In this talk, I give an introduction to the notion of VC-dimension, present our bounds on the VC-dimension of unions and intersections of half-spaces, then discuss some results on graphs with bounded VC-dimension.
No prior knowledge of computational geometry or learning theory is required.
A part of the talk is based on the paper M. Csikós, A. Kupavskii, N. H. Mustafa — Tight Lower Bounds on the VC-dimension of Geometric Set Systems (Journal of Machine Learning Research, 2019)
The talk will also be available on zoom.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 avril 2023, 15 heures, 147, Salles Olympe de Gouge
Sagar Sawant (IIT Madras, Chennai, India) Digraph analogue of Stanley's Tree Conjecture,
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 avril 2023, 15 heures, 1007
Maud Szusterman (IMJ-PRG) Extended formulations of spanning tree polytopes
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mercredi 29 mars 2023, 14 heures, 3052
Valentin Bartier (LIRIS) Independent set reconfiguration in sparse graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 14 mars 2023, 15 heures, 1007
Antoine Dailly (LIMOS Clermont Auvergne) Algorithms for the Metric Dimension problem on directed graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 10 janvier 2023, 15 heures, Salle 1007
Nacim Oijid (LIRIS) On the complexity of Avoidance positionnal games
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 novembre 2022, 15 heures, 1007
Ambroise Baril (LORIA) Component twinwidth: linear bounds with cliquewidth, algorithmic applications and approximations
Following the same principle, Bonnet et al. have very recently introduced the notion of contraction sequence of a graph: the high-level idea is to gain time by treating similarily vertices with a similar neighborhood, generalizing naturally the algorithms on cographs.
The quality of a contraction sequence can be mesured by two (among other) non-functionally equivalent parameters called twin-width and component twin-width. It is clear that the primary focus of Bonnet et al. was twin-width, leaving component twin-width almost unexplored in the whole literature.
It is known that cliquewidth and component twinwidth are functionnaly equivalent: Bonnet et al. proved this result through functional equivalence with booleanwidth (which is known to be functionnaly equivalent with cliquewidth), which leads to an exponential bound on component twin-width by cliquewidth; and a double-exponential bound on cliquewidth by component twin-width.
In this presentation, I will prove that these two bounds can be drastically improved: we will obtain very simple linear bounds. Then, I will give an example of a concrete application of component twin-width (using dynamic programming) that always beats the best known upper bounds of the complexity of a counting version of several graph coloring problems. Finally, I will discuss how the linear bounds obtained can be used to extend the results known on the approximations of cliquewidth to approximations of component twinwidth.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 8 novembre 2022, 14 heures, 1007
Zahraa Mohsen (IMJ-PRG) On Coloring Digraphs and Certain Types of Paths and Cycles
During this talk we are going to present how the existence of certain types of paths and cycles in a digraph affects its chromatic number.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Lundi 10 octobre 2022, 11 heures, Salle 3058
Santiago Gúzman Pro (UNAM) Circular orderings of graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 22 juillet 2022, 14 heures 30, Salle 1007
Rong Luo (West Virginia University) Modulo flows and Integer flows of signed graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 5 avril 2022, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Yelena Yuditsky (Université libre de Bruxelles) Weak Coloring Numbers of Intersection Graphs
In this paper, we prove upper and lower bounds for the $k$-th weak coloring numbers of these classes of intersection graphs. As a consequence, we describe a natural graph class whose strong coloring numbers are polynomial in $k$, but the weak coloring numbers are exponential. We also observe a surprising difference in terms of the dependence of the weak coloring numbers on the dimension between touching graphs of balls (single-exponential) and hypercubes (double-exponential).
This is joint work with Zden\v{e}k Dvo\v{r}\'{a}k, Jakub Pek\'arek and Torsten Ueckerdt.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 mars 2022, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Arthur Da Cunha (COATI Team, Inria Sophia Antipolis, I3S) Proving the Strong Lottery Ticket Hypothesis for Convolutional Neural Networks
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 15 février 2022, 14 heures, salle 1007
Pierluigi Crescenzi (GSSI, L'Aquila, Italy) Planning with Biological Neurons and Synapses
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 14 décembre 2021, 15 heures, Salle 1007
Laurent Beaudou (HSE) Of points and lines
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 30 novembre 2021, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Marco Caoduro (G-Scop) Hitting and packing squares
Clearly, $\tau(\mathcal{S})$ is at least $\nu(\mathcal{S})$. We prove that $\tau(\mathcal{S}) \leq 10 \nu(\mathcal{S})$ and present a family where $\tau(\mathcal{S}) = 3\nu(\mathcal{S})$.
During the talk, we will sketch the proof of the main result and remark how to extend our approach to families of rectangles with \emph{bounded aspect ratios}.
This is joint work with András Sebő.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 9 novembre 2021, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Subir Kumar Ghosh (RKMVERI) Chromatic art gallery problems for point and vertex guards
Chromatic art gallery problems arise from applications in areas like landmark-based robot navigation and wireless networks. One such problem is the weak-conflict free guarding of polygons, where the objective is to colour a chosen guard set S for P using the minimum number of colours such that each point within P sees at least one guard from S with a unique colour. Note that the objective here is to minimize the number of colors rather than the number of guards in S. We present an algorithm for weak conflict-free guarding of P (without holes) where the point guard set is coloured using only O(log n) colours. If the guards are allowed to place only on vertices of P, the corresponding algorithm for weak conflict-free vertex guarding problem uses O(log^2 n) colours. This algorithm uses funnel structures of weak visibility polygons for placing coloured guards.
Finally, we discuss a few open problems on weak conflict-free guarding of P for both point and vertex guards.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 26 octobre 2021, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Sagnik Sen (IIT Dharwad, India) On homomorphisms of simple signed graphs of some families
Homomorphisms of signed graphs have been attracting growing attention in the last decades, especially due to their strong connections to the theories of graph coloring and graph minors. These homomorphisms have been particularly studied through the scope of the chromatic number. In this work, we provide new results and bounds on the chromatic number of several families of signed graphs (planar graphs, triangle-free planar graphs, $K_n$-minor-free graphs, and bounded-degree graphs).
Joint work with: Bensmail, Das, Nandi, Pierron, Sopena
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 octobre 2021, 14 heures, Salle 1007 and via ZOOM
Mirna Džamonja (IRIF) On limits-from the finite to the countable and very much uncountable graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 5 octobre 2021, 14 heures, ZOOM
Daniel Gonçalves (CNRS, Université de Montpellier) Segment representation of planar graphs
In his PhD Thesis E.R. Scheinerman conjectured that every planar graph has a segment intersection representation, and he also conjectured that in the case of 3-colorable planar graphs, such a representation exists where only 3 slopes appear, one for each color class. We proved both of these conjectures, and we also proved that such a representation with 4 slopes, one per color class, does not always exist. This last proof relies on the fact that planar signed graphs are not always four colorable, for some signed version of colorings. During the talk we will provide the general idea of these proofs.
These works were joint works with J. Chalopin, L. Isenmann, and C. Pennarun
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 24 juin 2021, 10 heures, 3052 and ZOOM
David Roberson (Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University ofDenmark) Quantum isomorphism and counting homomorphisms from planar graphs
This is joint work with Laura Mančinska.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 mai 2021, 14 heures, ZOOM
Adrian Pastine (Universidad Nacional de San Luis) Null Decomposition of Graphs
In this talk, we study the null decomposition of bipartite graphs without cycles of length $0$ modulo $4$. We show that $C_S(G)$ contains a unique maximum independent set and that $C_N(G)$ contains a unique maximum matching. We use the decomposition to show that $\Supp{G}$ is the intersection of all maximum independent sets of $G$, and the union of the unmatched vertices over all maximum matchings. As an application, we present an algorithm that finds a sparse basis for the null space of adjacency matrix of forests in optimal time.
This talk is based on joint work with Daniel Jaume and Gonzalo Molina, from Universidad Nacional de San Luis, and Martin Safe, from Universidad Nacional del Sur.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 mai 2021, 14 heures, ZOOM
Bérénice Delcroix-Oger Parking trees
This is a joint work with Matthieu Josuat-Vergès and Lucas Randazzo.
This would be a joint (Combi-Graph) seminar.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 27 avril 2021, 15 heures, ZOOM
Daniel Adolfo Quiroz Colouring with conditions on distances
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 13 avril 2021, 15 heures, ZOOM
Adrian Pastine (Universidad Nacional de San Luis) Null Decomposition of Graphs
In this talk, we study the null decomposition of bipartite graphs without cycles of length $0$ modulo $4$. We show that $C_S(G)$ contains a unique maximum independent set and that $C_N(G)$ contains a unique maximum matching. We use the decomposition to show that $\Supp{G}$ is the intersection of all maximum independent sets of $G$, and the union of the unmatched vertices over all maximum matchings. As an application, we present an algorithm that finds a sparse basis for the null space of adjacency matrix of forests in optimal time.
This talk is based on joint work with Daniel Jaume and Gonzalo Molina, from Universidad Nacional de San Luis, and Martin Safe, from Universidad Nacional del Sur.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 16 mars 2021, 14 heures, ZOOM
Filippo Brunelli (IRIF) On Computing Pareto Optimal Paths in Weighted Time-Dependent Networks
Meeting ID: 894 0889 8417 Passcode: 005585
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 2 mars 2021, 14 heures, Online Via ZOOM
Stephane Devismes (VERIMAG U. Grenoble Alpes) Self-stabilizing Systems in Spite of High Dynamics
In this talk, we will consider self-stabilization in highly dynamic networks, i.e., networks suffering from unexpected and frequent topological changes. Precisely, assuming that nodes are uniquely identified, we study the self-stabilizing leader election problem in three important classes of dynamic networks to obtain solutions tolerating both transient faults (such as memory corruption) and frequent topological changes.
We first study conditions under which our problem can be solved and then propose several algorithms. Our results reveal that the assumption on the knowledge of the number N of processes is central. Indeed, we show that, as soon as there is no strong guarantees on the temporal connectivity in the network, the knowledge of the exact value of N is required. Finally, the convergence time of self-stabilizing leader election cannot be bounded in some important cases. In those cases, we show that our solutions are speculative since their convergence time can be still bounded in a subset of more probable executions.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 25 février 2021, 14 heures, Online, via Zoom
Matej Stehlik (G-SCOP) Critical subgraphs of Kneser graphs
Joint work with Tomas Kaiser.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 23 février 2021, 14 heures, Online, via Zoom
Arnau Padrol (Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu) Sweeps, polytopes, oriented matroids, and allowable graphs of permutations
This is based on joint work with Eva Philippe.
https://u-paris.zoom.us/j/89408898417?pwd=bTNpVXJXc085MzJabWZ6YVJFRFUwZz09
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 2 février 2021, 14 heures, Salle 3052 and ZOOM
Zhouningxin Wang (IRIF) Density of C_{-4}-critical signed graphs
Zoom link: https://u-paris.zoom.us/j/89408898417?pwd=bTNpVXJXc085MzJabWZ6YVJFRFUwZz09
Meeting ID: 894 0889 8417 Passcode: 005585
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 janvier 2021, 15 heures, Online
Benjamin R. Moore (University of Waterloo) The Pseudoforest Nine Dragon Tree conjecture is true
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 24 novembre 2020, 14 heures, Online
Laurent Feuilloley (IRIF) Graph classes and forbidden patterns on three and four vertices
A popular way to characterize a graph class is to list a minimal set of forbidden induced subgraphs. Unfortunately, this strategy hardly ever leads to a very efficient recognition algorithm. On the other hand, many graph classes can be efficiently recognized by techniques that use some ordering of the nodes, such as the one given by a traversal.
We study specifically graphs that have an ordering avoiding some ordered structures that we call *patterns*. Several well-known classes such as chordal, bipartite, interval, and comparability graphs have a characterization in terms of forbidden patterns. It is also known that any class defined by a set of forbidden patterns on three nodes can be recognized in polynomial time. In a recent paper, we've characterized systematically all the classes defined by sets of forbidden patterns (on three nodes). Surprisingly there is a relatively small number of them, and they are all well-known. Also, almost all of them can actually be recognized in linear time. I will talk about these results and about the rich structure of the classes defined by patterns. I will also talk about on-going work in building bridges between intersection graphs and patterns on four vertices.
https://bbb-front.math.univ-paris-diderot.fr/recherche/zho-14p-vqa-bic
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 20 octobre 2020, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Pierre Fraigniaud (IRIF) Distributed Certification of Graph Classes
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 6 octobre 2020, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Marthe Bonamy (CNRS, LaBRI) On Vizing's edge colouring question
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 septembre 2020, 15 heures, Salle 3052
Rongxing Xu Multiple list colouring of $3$-choice critical graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 2 juin 2020, 15 heures 30, Online
Julien Baste (Universität Ulm) Diversity of Solutions: An Exploration Through the Lens of Fixed-Parameter Tractability Theory
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 29 mai 2020, 14 heures, Online
Guillaume Ducoffe Diameter computation on H-minor free graphs and graphs of bounded (distance) VC-dimension
• Our first main result is a Monte Carlo algorithm that on graphs of distance VC-dimension at most d, for any fixed k, either computes the diameter or concludes that it is larger than k in time O(k · mn^{1−εd}), where εd ∈ (0; 1) only depends on d. We thus obtain a truly subquadratic-time parameterized algorithm for computing the diameter on such graphs. • Then as a byproduct of our approach, we get a truly subquadratic-time randomized algorithm for constant diameter computation on all the nowhere dense graph classes. The latter classes include all proper minor-closed graph classes, bounded-degree graphs and graphs of bounded expansion. • Finally, we show how to remove the dependency on k for any graph class that excludes a fixed graph H as a minor. More generally, our techniques apply to any graph with constant distance VC-dimension and polynomial expansion (or equivalently having strongly sublinear balanced separators). As a result for all such graphs one obtains a truly subquadratictime randomized algorithm for computing their diameter.
We note that all our results also hold for radius computation. Our approach is based on the work of Chazelle and Welzl who proved the existence of spanning paths with strongly sublinear stabbing number for every hypergraph of constant VC-dimension. We show how to compute such paths efficiently by combining known algorithms for the stabbing number problem with a clever use of ε-nets, region decomposition and other partition techniques.
If time allows, I will also mention recent improvements of the above results, to eccentricity and distance oracle computations.
This is joint work with Michel Habib and Laurent Viennot.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 14 avril 2020, 15 heures 30, Online
Pierluigi Crescenzi (IRIF) Temporal Closeness in Temporal Networks
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 7 avril 2020, 15 heures 30, Online
Pierre Berge Fixed-parameter algorithms for finding small separators in graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 janvier 2020, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Ana Silva (Departamento de Matemática - Universidade Federal do Ceará) Time for coloring
In this talk, I will present the results, obtained in collaboration with Andrea Marino, in which we focus on temporal graphs whose edges remain active for at least $t$ timestamps (these are called $t$-persistent temporal graphs). Among other things, we: 1) give some upper bounds for the minimum number of colors needed in terms of $t$ and of the chromatic number of the underlying static graph $G$; 2) prove that $k$ colors are always sufficient when $t$ is at least $\log_k n$, and that if $t$ is smaller, then it is NP-complete to decide whether $k$ colors are enough; 3) prove that the problem is NP-complete even when $G$ has bounded treewidth, and each snapshot is planar and has constant size; and 4) give an FPT algorithm with parameters the treewidth of $G$ and $T$.
Our results also imply many interesting facts: for instance, we know that if $G$ is planar and 2-persistent, then 2 colors are always sufficient
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 3 décembre 2019, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Marc Heinrich Counting independent sets in strongly orderable graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 26 novembre 2019, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Denis Cornaz (Université Paris Dauphine) Flows in signed graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 novembre 2019, 15 heures 30, Salle 3052
Suchismita Mishra (IITM) Strong chromatic index of unitary Cayley graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mercredi 6 novembre 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Laurent Viennot Distance labeling, Ruzsa-Szemeredi graphs and SumIndex communication complexity problem
Joint work with Adrian Kosowski and Przemyslaw Uznanski.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 octobre 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Michael Lampis (Universite Paris Dauphine) Finer Tight Bounds for Coloring on Clique-Width
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 8 octobre 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Fabien De Montgolfier (IRIF) Algorithms for generalized modular decomposition
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Lundi 24 juin 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Carola Doerr (CNRS, LIP6 Sorbonne University) Evolutionary Algorithms – From Theory to Practice and Back
In the last 15 years, the theory of randomized black-box optimization has advanced considerably, and has contributed to efficient optimization by providing insights into the working principles of black-box optimization which are hard or impossible to obtain by empirical means. On the other hand, empirically-guided benchmarking has opened up new research directions for theoretical investigations.
In this presentation we will discuss the state of the art in the theory of randomized black-box optimization algorithms. As part of this critical survey we will also mention a number of open questions and connections to other fields of Computer Science.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 mai 2019, 15 heures, Salle 1007
Jean-Florent Raymond (TU Berlin) Enumerating minimal dominating sets in $K_t$-free graphs
Link to the article: https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.00789
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 21 mai 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Ben Seamone (Université de Montréal and Dawson College) Eternal domination in graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 9 mai 2019, 15 heures, Salle 1007
Amélie Gheerbrant (IRIF) Graph query languages
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 9 avril 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Binh-Minh Bui-Xuan (LIP6) Temporal matching
In contrast to classical graph theory, we show that the problem of computing a temporal matching of maximum size in a link stream is in general NP-hard. We then depict a kernelization algorithm parameterized by the solution size for the problem, producing quadratic kernels. As a byproduct we also give a 2-approximation algorithm. Both algorithms are implemented and confronted to link streams collected from real world graph data:
https://github.com/antoinedimitriroux/Temporal-Matching-in-Link-Streams
We observe from the experiments that the kernelization algorithm can perform very well in practice, reducing the instance size downto 10-20% on realistic mining parameters. In contrast, the 2-approximation gives rather mixed results. We conjecture that the approximation factor can be improved.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 22 mars 2019, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Julien Baste (Universität Ulm, Ulm, Germany) Hitting minors on bounded treewidth graphs
The presented results are joint work with Ignasi Sau and Dimitrios Thilikos and can be found in <https://arxiv.org/abs/1704.07284>.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 mars 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Rémy Belmonte Token Sliding on Split Graphs
Joint work with Eun-Jung Kim, Michael Lampis, Valia Mitsou, Yota Otachi and Florian Sikora.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mercredi 6 mars 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Marc Lelarge (Inria & ENS Paris) Spectral embedding for graph classification
Although our SGE is handcrafted, we also show how our generic embedding technique can be learned and built in a data-driven manner opening the way to new learning algorithms and deep learning architectures with some invariant constraints built-in.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 février 2019, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Marthe Bonamy (CNRS - LABRI) Around Brooks' theorem
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 février 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Danupon Nanongkai (KTH) Distributed Shortest Paths, Exactly
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 janvier 2019, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Guillaume Ducoffe (ICI Roumanie) Computing Giant Diameters with Breadth-First Search and Range Queries
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 18 décembre 2018, 15 heures 30, Salle 3052
Bergougnoux Benjamin (IRIF) Rank Based Approach on Graphs with Structured Neighborhood
The $d$-neighbor equivalence is a tools introduced by Bui-Xuan et al. in 2013 to obtained efficient parameterized algorithms for many width measures (clique-width, rank-width, mim-width,…) and for many problems with a locally checkable constraint (Dominating Set, Independent Set,…).
By combining these two notions, we obtain efficient algorithms for several connectivity problems such as Connected Dominating Set, Node Weighted Steiner Tree, Maximum Induced Tree, Longest Induced Path, and Feedback Vertex Set. For all these problems, we obtain $2^{O(k)}\cdot n^{O(1)}$, $2^{O(k \log(k))}\cdot n^{O(1)}$, $2^{O(k^2)}\cdot n^{O(1)}$ and $n^{O(k)}$ time algorithms parameterized respectively by clique-width, $\mathbb{Q}$-rank-width, rank-width and maximum induced matching width. Our approach simplifies and unifies the known algorithms for each of the parameters and match asymptotically also the best time complexity for Vertex Cover and Dominating Set.
Paper available on HAL : https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01799573v2/document
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 11 décembre 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Riste Škrekovski (University of Ljubljana) Some results and problems on unique-maximum colorings of plane graphs
We first show that the conjecture holds for various subclasses of planar graphs but then we disprove it for planar graphs in general. So, we conclude that the facial unique-maximum chromatic number of the sphere is not four but five.
Additionally, we will consider a facial edge-coloring analogue of the aforementioned coloring, and we will conclude the talk with various open problems.
(Joint work with Vesna Andova, Bernard Lidick\'y, Borut Lu\v{z}ar, and Kacy Messerschmidt)
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 29 novembre 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3014
Carenne Ludeña (Universidad Jose Tadeo Lozano) A random graph model based on the Modular decomposition of graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 27 novembre 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Miguel Mendez Set operads and decomposition theory
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 23 octobre 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Yllka Velaj (CWI Amsterdam) Stable Outcomes in Modified Fractional Hedonic Games
We are interested in the scenario in which agents, individually or jointly, choose to form a new coalition or to join an existing one, until a stable outcome is reached. To this aim, we consider common stability notions, leading to strong Nash stable outcomes, Nash stable outcomes or core stable outcomes: we study their existence, complexity and performance, both in the case of general weights and in the case of 0-1 weights.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 22 mai 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
François Pirot (Université de Strasbourg) Fractional chromatic number of small degree graphs and girth.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Vendredi 6 avril 2018, 10 heures, Salle 3052
Cédric Bentz Steiner trees with edge capacities.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 3 avril 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Marcin Kaminski Induced minors and well-quasi-ordering
We show that the class of H-free graphs is well-quasi-ordered by induced minors if and only if H is an induced minor of the gem (=the path on 4 vertices plus a dominating vertex) or the graph obtained by adding a vertex of degree 2 to the K4 (= the complete graph on 4 vertices).
This generalizes a a result of Robin Thomas who proved that K4-free graphs are well-quasi-ordered by induced minors and complements similar dichotomy theorems proved by Guoli Ding for subgraphs and Peter Damaschke for induced subgraphs.
This is joint work with Jarosław Błasiok, Jean-Florent Raymond, and Théophile Trunck.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 27 mars 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Matej Stehlik (Université Grenoble Alpes - GSCOP) Nombre chromatique et la méthode topologique
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 20 mars 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Pierluigi Crescenzi (Universite de Pise) Computing node centrality in large graphs: from theory to practice and back
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 13 mars 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Mamadou Kante (ISIMA) Obstructions pour certaines classes de matroides linéaires
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 27 février 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Dieter Mitsche (Université Nice) Aspects des Graphes Aléatoires
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 20 février 2018, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Jan Arne Telle (University of Bergen) Width parameters of graphs and structured graph classes
Parts of the talk are based on joint work with O.Kwon and L.Jaffke, to appear at STACS 2018.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Lundi 12 février 2018, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Nabil Mustafa (ESIEE) Local Search for Geometric Optimization Problems.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 décembre 2017, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Jean Krivine (IRIF) Incremental Update for Graph Rewriting
Reference: Boutillier P., Ehrhard T., Krivine J. (2017) Incremental Update for Graph Rewriting. In: Yang H. (eds) Programming Languages and Systems. ESOP 2017. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 10201. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Séminaire commun du pole Algorihtmes et Structures Discrètes.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 17 octobre 2017, 14 heures, Salle 3052
Claire Mathieu (DI - ENS) Online k-compaction
This is joint work with Carl Staelin, Neal E. Young, and Arman Yousefi.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 26 septembre 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Jara Uitto (ETH Zurich) Tight Lower Bounds for the Cops and Robbers Game
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 septembre 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Mor Perry Aspects of Distributed Verification
1. Space-time tradeoffs for distributed verification, joint work with Rafail Ostrovsky and Will Rosenbaum. In this work, we introduce the notion of a t-PLS, which allows the verification procedure to run for super-constant time. Our work analyzes the tradeoffs of t-PLS between time, label size, message length, and computation space. We construct a universal t-PLS and prove that it uses the same amount of total communication as a known one-round universal PLS, and t factor smaller labels. In addition, we provide a general technique to prove lower bounds for space-time tradeoffs of t-PLS. We use this technique to show an optimal tradeoff for testing that a network is acyclic (cycle free). Our optimal t-PLS for acyclicity uses proof size, message size and computation space O( ( log n)/t).
2. Approximate proof-labeling schemes, joint work with Keren Censor-Hillel and Ami Paz. In this work we extend the PLS model by defining the approximate PLS (APLS) model. In this new model, the predicates for verification are of the form f(G)\le f'(G), where f, f': F → N for a family of configurations F and the set of natural numbers N. Informally, the predicates considered in this model are a comparison between two values of the configuration. As in the PLS model, nodes exchange labels in order to locally verify the predicate, and all must accept if the network satisfies the predicate. The soundness condition is relaxed with an approximation ration alpha, so that only if f(G) > alpha*f'(G) some node must reject. We show that in the APLS model, the proof size can be much smaller than the proof size of the same predicate in the PLS model. Moreover, we prove that there is a tradeoff between the approximation ratio and the proof size.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 20 juin 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Siddarth Gupta A Topological Algorithm for Determining How Road Networks Evolve Over Time
Can you tell me how long should be the talk?
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 13 juin 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Afshin Behmaram Matching and covering in cubic graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 2 mai 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Pierre Aboulker (ULB) From chromatic number to dichromatic number
We first give some properties related to the dichromatic number in order to show why and how it generalizes the chromatic number of non-oriented graphs. Then we investigate the following questions: What can we say about subgraphs, induced subgraphs and topological minors of a digraph with large dichromatic number?
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 avril 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Mike Molloy (University of Toronto and Ecole Normale Superieure Paris) Entropy Compression and the Lovasz Local Lemma
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 18 avril 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Mikael Rabie (LIX) Time and Homonyms Considerations over Community Protocols
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 4 avril 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Valentin Garnero (INRIA Sophia Antipolis) (Méta)-noyaux constructifs et linéaires dans les graphes peu denses
La méthode de décomposition en régions [Alber, Fellows, Niedermeier] est un résultat majeur dans le domaine des noyaux. Elle a permis de construire de nombreux noyaux linaires pour des variantes de la Domination dans les graphes planaires. J'illustrerai cette méthode avec le cas de la Domination Rouge Bleu, qui consiste à trouver, dans un graphe bicoloré, un ensemble de sommets bleus tel que tous les sommets rouges sont à distance au plus 1 de la solution.
Cette méthode a ensuite été généralisée par des méta-résultats [ex: Bodlaender, Fomin, Lokshtanov, Penninkx, Saurabh, Thilikos], qui prouve l'existence de noyaux (dans des graphes peu denses) pour tout problème vérifiant certaines conditions génériques. Je présenterai un de ses méta-résultats, qui se base sur la programmation dynamique et sur la décomposition en protrusion, et qui a le mérite d’être constructif.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 mars 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Juho Hirvonen (IRIF) Recent developments in the theory of distributed graph algorithms
I will discuss two recent papers in this field. First, we gave a lower bound showing that there exist LCL problems of ”intermediate” complexity, that is, complexity strictly between known complexity classes (Brandt et al., STOC 2016). The proof is by a new kind of simulation argument. Second, Chang et al. (FOCS 2016) showed that this lower bound implies an exponential separation between the randomized and deterministic LOCAL models. Chang et al. also show further connections between the randomized and deterministic models, and establish a useful speed-up simulation for the deterministic LOCAL model.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 21 mars 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Evangelos Bampas (LIF - Université Aix Marseille) Linear search by a pair of distinct-speed robots
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 février 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Laurent Viennot (INRIA - IRIF) Beyond Highway Dimension: Small Distance Labels Using Tree Skeletons
The goal of a hub-based distance labeling scheme for a network $G = (V, E)$ is to assign a small subset $S(u) \subseteq V$ to each node $u \in V$, in such a way that for any pair of nodes $u, v$, the intersection of hub sets $S(u) \cap S(v)$ contains a node on the shortest $uv$-path. The existence of small hub sets, and consequently efficient shortest path processing algorithms, for road networks is an empirical observation. A theoretical explanation for this phenomenon was proposed by Abraham et al. (SODA 2010) through a network parameter they called highway dimension, which captures the size of a hitting set for a collection of shortest paths of length at least $r$ intersecting a given ball of radius $2r$. In this talk, we revisit this explanation, introducing a more tractable (and directly comparable) parameter based solely on the structure of shortest-path spanning trees, which we call skeleton dimension. We show that skeleton dimension admits an intuitive definition for both directed and undirected graphs, provides a way of computing labels more efficiently than by using highway dimension, and leads to comparable or stronger theoretical bounds on hub set size.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 7 février 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Edouard Bonnet (Middlesex University, London) Fine-grained complexity of coloring geometric intersection graphs.
The guideline and motivation of the talk is to go beyond the NP-hardness of coloring those geometric graphs, and precise what is the best (hopefully subexponential) running time that we can get.
This is based on a joint work with Csaba Biró, Dániel Marx, Tillmann Miltzow, and Paweł Rzążewski, and an ongoing project with Stéphan Thomassé and a subset of the aforementioned authors.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 24 janvier 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Maximilien Danisch (Telecom Paris Tech) Towards real-world graph algorithmics
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 10 janvier 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Carl Feghali (IRIF) Problems and Results in Kempe Equivalence of Colorings
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 3 janvier 2017, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Marthe Bonamy (Labri - CNRS) Reed's conjecture and strong edge coloring
This is joint work with Thomas Perrett (Technical University of Denmark) and Luke Postle (University of Waterloo).
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 13 décembre 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Hang Zhou (Max Planck Institute for Informatics) Graph Reconstruction and Verification
In this talk, I will introduce the problems of graph reconstruction and verification via oracles. I will investigate randomized algorithms based on a Voronoi cell decomposition. I will also analyze greedy algorithms, and prove that they are near-optimal.
The talk is based on joint work with Claire Mathieu and Sampath Kannan.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 29 novembre 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Michel Habib (IRIF) Cocomparability graphs and greedy algorithms
A cocomparability graph is a graph whose complement admits a transitive orientation. An interval graph is the intersection graph of a family of intervals on the real line. In this paper we investigate the relationships between interval and cocomparability graphs. I will first present some recent algorithms we obtained on cocomparability graphs. They show that for some problems, the algorithm used on interval graphs can also be used with small modifications on cocomparability graphs. Many of these algorithms are based on graph searches that preserve cocomparability orderings.
Then I will propose a characterization of cocomparability graphs via a lattice structure on the set of their maximal cliques. Using this characterization we can prove that every maximal interval subgraph of a cocomparability graph $G$ is also a maximal chordal subgraph of $G$.
This characterization also has interesting algorithmic consequences and we show that a new graph search, namely Local Maximal Neighborhood Search (LocalMNS) leads to an $O(n+mlogn)$ time algorithm to find a maximal interval subgraph of a cocomparability graph. Similarly I propose a linear time algorithm to compute all simplicial vertices in a cocomparability graph. In both cases we improve on the current state of knowledge.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 25 octobre 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Jonas Lefevre (IRIF) Self-stabilizing Metric Graphs
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 27 septembre 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Ha Duong Phan (Institute of Mathematics, VAST, Vietnam.) Algorithms for computing the rank of divisors on some classes of graphs.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 7 juillet 2016, 10 heures, Salle 1016
Eli Gafni (UCLA) The Role of Mantras in (Distributed-Computing) Research
(Attention jour horaire et salle inhabituels)
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 28 juin 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Janna Burman (LRI - Université Paris Sud) Space-Optimal Counting in Population Protocols
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 21 juin 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Qiang Sun (LRI) Locating any two vertices on Hamiltonian cycles
The main tools of our proof are Regularity Lemma of Szemeredi and Blow-up Lemma of Koml os et al..
This is a joint work with Weihua He and Hao Li.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Jeudi 9 juin 2016, 14 heures, Salle 2015
Feodor Dragan (Kent State University) Tree-Like Structures in Graphs: A Metric Point of View
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 24 mai 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Eujung Kim Non encore annoncé.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 17 mai 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Edita Rollova (University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, Czech republic) New proof of Seymour's 6-flow theorem
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 12 avril 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Nicolas Schabanel Folding Turing is hard but feasible
We introduce and study the computational power of Oritatami, a theoretical model to explore greedy molecular folding, by which the molecule begins to fold before waiting the end of its production. This model is inspired by our recent experimental work demonstrating the construction of shapes at the nanoscale by folding an RNA molecule during its transcription from an engineered sequence of synthetic DNA. While predicting the most likely conformation is known to be NP-complete in other models, Oritatami sequences fold optimally in linear time. Although our model uses only a small subset of the mechanisms known to be involved in molecular folding, we show that it is capable of efficient universal computation, implying that any extension of this model will have this property as well.
We introduce general design techniques for programming these molecules. Our main result in this direction is an algorithm in time linear in the sequence length, that finds a rule for folding the sequence deterministically into a prescribed set of shapes depending of its environment. This shows the corresponding problem is fixed-parameter tractable although we proved it is NP-complete in the number of possible environments. This algorithm was used effectively to design several key steps of our constructions.
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 5 avril 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Matteo Seminaroti Similarity-First Search: a new algorithm with application to Robinsonian matrix recognition
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 29 mars 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Benjmain Momege Autour de la connexité dans les graphes avec conflits
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 9 février 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Thomas Perrett (Technical University of Denmark) Roots of the chromatic polynomial, spanning trees and minors
Algorithmique distribuée et graphes
Mardi 19 janvier 2016, 14 heures, Salle 1007
Sang-il Oum (KAIST) Variants of Hadwiger's conjecture
We also prove variants of the odd Hadwiger's conjecture as follows: Every graph with no odd K_t minor admits a partition of its vertex set into 7t-10 sets, each inducing a subgraph of bounded maximum degree. As a corollary, we prove that every graph with no odd K_t minor admits a partition of its vertex set into 16t-19 sets, each inducing a subgraph with no large components. The last result improves the result of Kawarabayashi, who showed it with 496t sets.
This talk is a combination of three works; first with K. Edwards, D. Kang, J. Kim, and P. Seymour, second with C. Liu, and third with D. Kang.