Further Results on Rendering Geometric Intersection Graphs Sparse by Dispersion

Abstract

Removing overlaps is a central task in domains such as scheduling, visibility, and map labelling. This can be modelled using graphs, where overlap removals correspond to enforcing a certain sparsity constraint on the graph structure. We continue the study of the problem Geometric Graph Edit Distance (GGED), where the aim is to minimise the total cost of editing a geometric intersection graph to obtain a graph contained in a specific graph class. For us, the edit operation is the movement of objects, and the cost is the movement distance. We present an algorithm for rendering the intersection graph of a set of unit circular arcs edgeless and k-clique-free in O(n n) time, where n is the number of arcs. The algorithm can be also used to solve an open case of the points-spreading problem on cyclic domains [Li \& Wang, CGT 2025]. We also show that GGED remains strongly NP-hard on unweighted interval graphs, solving an open problem of Honorato-Droguett et al. [WADS 2025]. We complement this result by showing that GGED is strongly NP-hard on sets of d-balls and d-cubes, for any d 2. Finally, we present an XP algorithm (parameterised by the number of maximal cliques) that removes all edges from the intersection graph of a set of weighted unit intervals.

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