Generalized hypertree width (short: ghw) is a concept that leads to a large class of efficiently solvable CSP instances, whose associated recognition problem (of checking whether the ghw of a CSP is bounded by a constant k) is however known to be NP-hard. An elegant way to circumvent this intractability has recently been proposed in the literature, by means of a "no- promise" approach solving CSPs of bounded ghw without the need of actually computing a generalized hypertree decomposition. In fact, despite the conceptual relevance of this approach, its computational issues have not yet been investigated and, indeed, precise bounds on the running time of the no-promise algorithm are missing. The first contribution of this paper is precisely to fill this gap. Indeed, the computational complexity of the no-promise approach is analyzed, by exploiting an intuitive characterization relying on the notion of hyperconsistency width. It turns out that, in the basic formulation, the approach is hardly suited for practical applications mainly because of its bad scaling in the size of the constraint database. Motivated by these news and based on a variant of hyperconsistency width, a different and more efficient method to decide whether CSPs of bounded ghw admit solutions is then provided. Importantly, the improved method exhibits the same scaling as current evaluation algorithms for instances of bounded hypertree width, nonetheless allowing to isolate a larger class of queries. Finally, to give a complete picture of the complexity issues of the no-promise approach, the problems of computing one solution and of enumerating all the solutions are also studied. © 2009 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

HyperConsistency Width for Constraint Satisfaction: Algorithms and Complexity Results

GRECO, Gianluigi;
2009-01-01

Abstract

Generalized hypertree width (short: ghw) is a concept that leads to a large class of efficiently solvable CSP instances, whose associated recognition problem (of checking whether the ghw of a CSP is bounded by a constant k) is however known to be NP-hard. An elegant way to circumvent this intractability has recently been proposed in the literature, by means of a "no- promise" approach solving CSPs of bounded ghw without the need of actually computing a generalized hypertree decomposition. In fact, despite the conceptual relevance of this approach, its computational issues have not yet been investigated and, indeed, precise bounds on the running time of the no-promise algorithm are missing. The first contribution of this paper is precisely to fill this gap. Indeed, the computational complexity of the no-promise approach is analyzed, by exploiting an intuitive characterization relying on the notion of hyperconsistency width. It turns out that, in the basic formulation, the approach is hardly suited for practical applications mainly because of its bad scaling in the size of the constraint database. Motivated by these news and based on a variant of hyperconsistency width, a different and more efficient method to decide whether CSPs of bounded ghw admit solutions is then provided. Importantly, the improved method exhibits the same scaling as current evaluation algorithms for instances of bounded hypertree width, nonetheless allowing to isolate a larger class of queries. Finally, to give a complete picture of the complexity issues of the no-promise approach, the problems of computing one solution and of enumerating all the solutions are also studied. © 2009 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
2009
978-3-642-02028-5
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11770/164076
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