Counting Induced Subgraphs: A Topological Approach to #W[1]-hardness
Abstract
We investigate the problem \#IndSub() of counting all induced subgraphs of size k in a graph G that satisfy a given property . This continues the work of Jerrum and Meeks who proved the problem to be \#W[1]-hard for some families of properties which include, among others, (dis)connectedness [JCSS 15] and even- or oddness of the number of edges [Combinatorica 17]. Using the recent framework of graph motif parameters due to Curticapean, Dell and Marx [STOC 17], we discover that for monotone properties , the problem \#IndSub() is hard for \#W[1] if the reduced Euler characteristic of the associated simplicial (graph) complex of is non-zero. This observation links \#IndSub() to Karp's famous Evasiveness Conjecture, as every graph complex with non-vanishing reduced Euler characteristic is known to be evasive. Applying tools from the "topological approach to evasiveness" which was introduced in the seminal paper of Khan, Saks and Sturtevant [FOCS 83], we prove that \#IndSub() is \#W[1]-hard for every monotone property that does not hold on the Hamilton cycle as well as for some monotone properties that hold on the Hamilton cycle such as being triangle-free or not k-edge-connected for k > 2. Moreover, we show that for those properties \#IndSub() can not be solved in time f(k)· no(k) for any computable function f unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis (ETH) fails. In the final part of the paper, we investigate non-monotone properties and prove that \#IndSub() is \#W[1]-hard if is any non-trivial modularity constraint on the number of edges with respect to some prime q or if enforces the presence of a fixed isolated subgraph.
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