Co-nondeterminism in compositions: A kernelization lower bound for a Ramsey-type problem
Stefan Kratsch

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel co-nondeterministic composition technique to establish kernelization lower bounds for a Ramsey-type problem, demonstrating that no polynomial kernel exists unless NP is contained in coNP/poly.
Contribution
It provides the first example of how co-nondeterminism can facilitate composition algorithms to prove kernelization lower bounds for complex problems.
Findings
Co-nondeterministic composition rules out polynomial kernels for the problem.
Embedding t instances into a host graph with specific properties is key.
The problem does not admit a polynomial kernel unless NP oNP/poly.
Abstract
Until recently, techniques for obtaining lower bounds for kernelization were one of the most sought after tools in the field of parameterized complexity. Now, after a strong influx of techniques, we are in the fortunate situation of having tools available that are even stronger than what has been required in their applications so far. Based on a result of Fortnow and Santhanam (JCSS 2011), Bodlaender et al. (JCSS 2009) showed that, unless NP \subseteq coNP/poly, the existence of a deterministic polynomial-time composition algorithm, i.e., an algorithm which outputs an instance of bounded parameter value which is yes if and only if one of t input instances is yes, rules out the existence of polynomial kernels for a problem. Dell and van Melkebeek (STOC 2010) continued this line of research and, amongst others, were able to rule out kernels of size O(k^d-eps) for certain problems,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Logic, Reasoning, and Knowledge
