Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
126 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
47 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
43 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
4 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
47 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

Parameterized Approximation for Maximum Weight Independent Set of Rectangles and Segments (2212.01620v1)

Published 3 Dec 2022 in cs.DS and cs.CG

Abstract: In the Maximum Weight Independent Set of Rectangles problem (MWISR) we are given a weighted set of $n$ axis-parallel rectangles in the plane. The task is to find a subset of pairwise non-overlapping rectangles with the maximum possible total weight. This problem is NP-hard and the best-known polynomial-time approximation algorithm, due to by Chalermsook and Walczak (SODA 2021), achieves approximation factor $O(\log\log n )$. While in the unweighted setting, constant factor approximation algorithms are known, due to Mitchell (FOCS 2021) and to G\'alvez et al. (SODA 2022), it remains open to extend these techniques to the weighted setting. In this paper, we consider MWISR through the lens of parameterized approximation. Grandoni et al. (ESA 2019) gave a $(1-\epsilon)$-approximation algorithm with running time $k{O(k/\epsilon8)} n{O(1/\epsilon8)}$ time, where $k$ is the number of rectangles in an optimum solution. Unfortunately, their algorithm works only in the unweighted setting and they left it as an open problem to give a parameterized approximation scheme in the weighted setting. Our contribution is a partial answer to the open question of Grandoni et al. (ESA 2019). We give a parameterized approximation algorithm for MWISR that given a parameter $k$, finds a set of non-overlapping rectangles of weight at least $(1-\epsilon) \text{opt}_k$ in $2{O(k \log(k/\epsilon))} n{O(1/\epsilon)}$ time, where $\text{opt}_k$ is the maximum weight of a solution of cardinality at most $k$. Note that thus, our algorithm may return a solution consisting of more than $k$ rectangles. To complement this apparent weakness, we also propose a parameterized approximation scheme with running time $2{O(k2 \log(k/\epsilon))} n{O(1)}$ that finds a solution with cardinality at most $k$ and total weight at least $(1-\epsilon)\text{opt}_k$ for the special case of axis-parallel segments.

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.