Almost-Uniform Edge Sampling: Leveraging Independent-Set and Local Graph Queries
Abstract
A central theme in sublinear graph algorithms is the relationship between counting and sampling: can the ability to approximately count a combinatorial structure be leveraged to sample it nearly uniformly at essentially the same cost? We study (i) independent-set (IS) queries, which return whether a vertex set S is edge-free, and (ii) two standard local queries: degree and neighbor queries. Eden and Rosenbaum (SOSA `18) proved that in the local-query model, uniform edge sampling is no harder than approximate edge counting. We extend this phenomenon to new settings. We establish sampling-counting equivalence for the hybrid model that combines IS and local queries, matching the complexity of edge-count estimation achieved by Adar, Hotam and Levi (2026), and an analogous equivalence for IS queries, matching the complexity of edge-count estimation achieved by Chen, Levi and Waingarten (SODA `20). For each query model, we show lower bounds for uniform edge sampling that essentially coincide with the known bounds for approximate edge counting.
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