Exact and Approximate Pattern Counting in Degenerate Graphs: New Algorithms, Hardness Results, and Complexity Dichotomies
We study the problems of counting the homomorphisms, counting the copies, and counting the induced copies of a k-vertex graph H in a d-degenerate n-vertex graph G. Our main result establishes exhaustive and explicit complexity classifications for counting subgraphs and induced subgraphs. We show that the (not necessarily induced) copies of H in G can be counted in time f(k,d)ยท n^max(๐๐๐(H),1)ยทlog n, where f is some computable function and ๐๐๐(H) is the size of the largest induced matching of H. Whenever the class of allowed patterns has unbounded induced matching number, this algorithm is essentially optimal: Unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis (ETH) fails, there is no algorithm running in time f(k,d)ยท n^o(๐๐๐(H)/log๐๐๐(H)) for any function f. In case of counting induced subgraphs, we obtain a similar classification along the independence number ฮฑ: we can count the induced copies of H in G in time f(k,d)ยท n^ฮฑ(H)ยทlog n, and if the class of allowed patterns has unbounded independence number, an algorithm running in time f(k,d)ยท n^o(ฮฑ(H)/logฮฑ(H)) is impossible, unless ETH fails. In the language of parameterized complexity, our results yield dichotomies in fixed-parameter tractable and #๐ถ[1]-hard cases if we parameterize by the size of the pattern and the degeneracy of the host graph. Our results imply that several patterns cannot be counted in time f(k,d)ยท n^o(k/log k), including k-matchings, k-independent sets, (induced) k-paths, (induced) k-cycles, and induced (k,k)-bicliques, unless ETH fails. Those lower bounds for exact counting are complemented with new algorithms for approximate counting of subgraphs and induced subgraphs in degenerate graphs.
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