A more versatile model for enumerative kernelization: a case study for Vertex Cover

Abstract

Enumerative kernelization is a recent promising at the intersection of parameterized complexity and enumeration algorithms, with two proposed models. The first, known as enum-kernels and due to Creignou et al., was too permissive, leading to constant-sized kernels for every problem solvable with FPT-delay. To remedy this, Golovach et al. proposed the polynomial-delay enumeration kernelization model that, while addressing the shortcoming of the previous one, appears to be too strict, which we believe is a central reason for the slow development of the area. In this paper, we propose a new model for enumeration kernels, which we have called polynomial-delay (PD) kernels. It is more flexible than Golovach et al.'s kernels while still preserving their qualities; informally, it allows us to ignore ``bad'' solutions of the compressed instance when producing the solution set of the input instance, but still requires that the ``good'' solutions are lifted with polynomial-delay. After discussing the main properties of our model, we design a generic framework for vertex-subset problems to adapt decision kernels into PD kernels of the same size. We showcase our model's versatility and the framework's expressive power on the Enum Vertex Cover problem, where we want to list all vertex covers of size at most k of a given graph. We generalize the kernelization dichotomy by Bougeret et al. about the existence of polynomial kernels for Vertex Cover parameterized by the vertex deletion distance to a minor-closed graph class, as well as by the solution size or feedback vertex number. The second one, in particular, is significantly simpler than the known kernel, requiring only a few lines for its lifting algorithm. Beyond our framework, we also show how to generalize to the enumeration setting the kernel of Bougeret et al. for the vertex-deletion distance to c-treedepth.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…