Bidimensionality and EPTAS
Fedor V. Fomin, Daniel Lokshtanov, Venkatesh Raman, Saket Saurabh

TL;DR
This paper enhances bidimensionality theory to develop a more powerful, simplified framework for designing Efficient Polynomial-Time Approximation Schemes (EPTASs) applicable to a broad class of problems on minor-free graphs.
Contribution
The authors unify and improve existing approaches to obtain EPTASs, extending applicability to problems previously lacking such algorithms, including cycle packing and maximum leaf spanning tree.
Findings
Unified framework for EPTASs on minor-free graphs.
Applicable to a wide range of packing and covering problems.
New EPTASs for problems like cycle packing and maximum leaf spanning tree.
Abstract
Bidimensionality theory is a powerful framework for the development of metaalgorithmic techniques. It was introduced by Demaine et al. as a tool to obtain sub-exponential time parameterized algorithms for problems on H-minor free graphs. Demaine and Hajiaghayi extended the theory to obtain PTASs for bidimensional problems, and subsequently improved these results to EPTASs. Fomin et. al related the theory to the existence of linear kernels for parameterized problems. In this paper we revisit bidimensionality theory from the perspective of approximation algorithms and redesign the framework for obtaining EPTASs to be more powerful, easier to apply and easier to understand. Two of the most widely used approaches to obtain PTASs on planar graphs are the Lipton-Tarjan separator based approach, and Baker's approach. Demaine and Hajiaghayi strengthened both approaches using bidimensionality…
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