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Kazuo Iwama

Researcher at Kyoto University

Publications -  255
Citations -  5207

Kazuo Iwama is an academic researcher from Kyoto University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Approximation algorithm & Stable marriage problem. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 253 publications receiving 4853 citations. Previous affiliations of Kazuo Iwama include Kyoto Sangyo University & Kyushu University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hard variants of stable marriage

TL;DR: This is the first comprehensive study of variants of the Stable Marriage Problem in which the preference lists of the participants are not necessarily complete and not necessarily totally ordered, and gives a 2-approximation algorithm for the problems of finding a stable matching of maximum or minimum size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Greedily Finding a Dense Subgraph

TL;DR: given an n-vertex graph with nonnegative edge weights and a positive integer k?n, the following greedy algorithm is studied: repeatedly remove a vertex with the minimum weighted-degree in the currently remaining graph, until exactly k vertices are left.
Book ChapterDOI

Stable Marriage with Incomplete Lists and Ties

TL;DR: This paper shows that the situation changes substantially if the problem not only becomes NP-hard, but also the optimal cost version has no approximation algorithm achieving the approximation ratio of N1-Ɛ, where N is the instance size, unless P=NP.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Transformation rules for designing CNOT-based quantum circuits

TL;DR: A simple but nontrivial set of local transformation rules for Control-NOT(CNOT)-based combinatorial circuits and it is shown that this rule set is complete, namely, for any two equivalent circuits, S1 and S2, there is a sequence of transformations, each of them in the rule set, which changes S1 to S2.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Survey of the Stable Marriage Problem and Its Variants

TL;DR: The stable marriage problem was introduced in 1962 by Gale and Shapley as discussed by the authors, and has attracted researchers in several areas, including mathematics, economics, game theory, computer science, etc.