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Long Paths Make Pattern-Counting Hard, and Deep Trees Make It Harder

Authors Vít Jelínek , Michal Opler , Jakub Pekárek



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Author Details

Vít Jelínek
  • Computer Science Institute, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
Michal Opler
  • Computer Science Institute, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
Jakub Pekárek
  • Department of Applied Mathematics, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

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Vít Jelínek, Michal Opler, and Jakub Pekárek. Long Paths Make Pattern-Counting Hard, and Deep Trees Make It Harder. In 16th International Symposium on Parameterized and Exact Computation (IPEC 2021). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 214, pp. 22:1-22:17, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2021) https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.IPEC.2021.22

Abstract

We study the counting problem known as #PPM, whose input is a pair of permutations π and τ (called pattern and text, respectively), and the task is to find the number of subsequences of τ that have the same relative order as π. A simple brute-force approach solves #PPM for a pattern of length k and a text of length n in time O(n^{k+1}), while Berendsohn, Kozma and Marx have recently shown that under the exponential time hypothesis (ETH), it cannot be solved in time f(k) n^{o(k/log k)} for any function f. In this paper, we consider the restriction of #PPM, known as 𝒞-Pattern #PPM, where the pattern π must belong to a hereditary permutation class 𝒞. Our goal is to identify the structural properties of 𝒞 that determine the complexity of 𝒞-Pattern #PPM.
We focus on two such structural properties, known as the long path property (LPP) and the deep tree property (DTP). Assuming ETH, we obtain these results:  
1) If 𝒞 has the LPP, then 𝒞-Pattern #PPM cannot be solved in time f(k)n^{o(√k)} for any function f, and 
2) if 𝒞 has the DTP, then 𝒞-Pattern #PPM cannot be solved in time f(k)n^{o(k/log² k)} for any function f.  
Furthermore, when 𝒞 is one of the so-called monotone grid classes, we show that if 𝒞 has the LPP but not the DTP, then 𝒞-Pattern #PPM can be solved in time f(k)n^{O(√ k)}. In particular, the lower bounds above are tight up to the polylog terms in the exponents.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Mathematics of computing → Permutations and combinations
  • Theory of computation → Pattern matching
  • Theory of computation → Problems, reductions and completeness
Keywords
  • Permutation pattern matching
  • subexponential algorithm
  • conditional lower bounds
  • tree-width

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References

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