Balanced Families of Perfect Hash Functions and Their Applications
Abstract
The construction of perfect hash functions is a well-studied topic. In this paper, this concept is generalized with the following definition. We say that a family of functions from [n] to [k] is a δ-balanced (n,k)-family of perfect hash functions if for every S ⊂eq [n], |S|=k, the number of functions that are 1-1 on S is between T/δ and δ T for some constant T>0. The standard definition of a family of perfect hash functions requires that there will be at least one function that is 1-1 on S, for each S of size k. In the new notion of balanced families, we require the number of 1-1 functions to be almost the same (taking δ to be close to 1) for every such S. Our main result is that for any constant δ > 1, a δ-balanced (n,k)-family of perfect hash functions of size 2O(k k) n can be constructed in time 2O(k k) n n. Using the technique of color-coding we can apply our explicit constructions to devise approximation algorithms for various counting problems in graphs. In particular, we exhibit a deterministic polynomial time algorithm for approximating both the number of simple paths of length k and the number of simple cycles of size k for any k ≤ O( n n) in a graph with n vertices. The approximation is up to any fixed desirable relative error.
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