scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Randomized Distributed Edge Coloring via an Extension of the Chernoff--Hoeffding Bounds

TLDR
Fast and simple randomized algorithms for edge coloring a graph in the synchronous distributed point-to-point model of computation and new techniques for proving upper bounds on the tail probabilities of certain random variables which are not stochastically independent are introduced.
Abstract
Certain types of routing, scheduling, and resource-allocation problems in a distributed setting can be modeled as edge-coloring problems We present fast and simple randomized algorithms for edge coloring a graph in the synchronous distributed point-to-point model of computation Our algorithms compute an edge coloring of a graph $G$ with $n$ nodes and maximum degree $\Delta$ with at most $16 \Delta + O(\log^{1+ \delta} n)$ colors with high probability (arbitrarily close to 1) for any fixed $\delta > 0$; they run in polylogarithmic time The upper bound on the number of colors improves upon the $(2 \Delta - 1)$-coloring achievable by a simple reduction to vertex coloring To analyze the performance of our algorithms, we introduce new techniques for proving upper bounds on the tail probabilities of certain random variables The Chernoff--Hoeffding bounds are fundamental tools that are used very frequently in estimating tail probabilities However, they assume stochastic independence among certain random variables, which may not always hold Our results extend the Chernoff--Hoeffding bounds to certain types of random variables which are not stochastically independent We believe that these results are of independent interest and merit further study

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report






Citations
More filters
Dissertation

From graphs to matrices, and back: new techniques for graph algorithms

TL;DR: This thesis develops a toolkit that combines a diverse set of modern algorithmic techniques, including sparsification, low-stretch spanning trees, the multiplicative-weights-update method, dynamic graph algorithms, fast Laplacian system solvers, and tools of spectral graph theory to obtain improved algorithms for several basic graph problems.
Posted Content

Local Multicoloring Algorithms: Computing a Nearly-Optimal TDMA Schedule in Constant Time

TL;DR: In this paper, the multicoloring problem has direct applications in the context of wireless ad hoc and sensor networks, where the scarcity of bandwidth, energy, and computing resources in wireless networks, as well as the often highly dynamic nature of these networks require that the multocoloring can be computed based on as little and as local information as possible.
Journal Article

Generating randomized roundings with cardinality constraints and derandomizations

TL;DR: In this paper, a general method to generate randomized roundings that satisfy cardinality constraints was proposed. But this method is different from the one taken by Srinivasan and Gandhi et al. (FOCS 2002) for one global constraint and the bipartite edge weight rounding problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed (Δ +1)-Coloring in Sublogarithmic Rounds

TL;DR: This work gives a new randomized distributed algorithm for (Δ +1)-coloring in the LOCAL model, running in O(√ log Δ)+ 2O (√log log n) rounds in a graph of maximum degree Δ, and extends to list-coloring where the palette of each node contains Δ +1 colors.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

CC-TDMA: Coloring- and Coding-Based Multi-Channel TDMA Scheduling for Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

TL;DR: A multi-channel time division multiple access (TDMA) scheduling based on edge coloring and algebraic coding theory, called CC-TDMA is proposed, which exhibits a better performance than previous work in terms of throughput and delay.
References
More filters
Book

Graph theory

Frank Harary
Book ChapterDOI

Probability Inequalities for sums of Bounded Random Variables

TL;DR: In this article, upper bounds for the probability that the sum S of n independent random variables exceeds its mean ES by a positive number nt are derived for certain sums of dependent random variables such as U statistics.
Book

The Probabilistic Method

Joel Spencer
TL;DR: A particular set of problems - all dealing with “good” colorings of an underlying set of points relative to a given family of sets - is explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Measure of Asymptotic Efficiency for Tests of a Hypothesis Based on the sum of Observations

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the likelihood ratio test for fixed sample size can be reduced to this form, and that for large samples, a sample of size $n$ with the first test will give about the same probabilities of error as a sample with the second test.
Journal ArticleDOI

Locality in distributed graph algorithms

TL;DR: This model focuses on the issue of locality in distributed processing, namely, to what extent a global solution to a computational problem can be obtained from locally available data.