
TL;DR
This paper introduces a property testing algorithm for determining whether a graph has bounded arboricity, providing near-optimal query complexity in the sparse-graphs model and advancing the understanding of graph property testing.
Contribution
The paper presents the first tolerant tester for bounded arboricity graphs in the sparse-graphs model with near-optimal query complexity.
Findings
The algorithm distinguishes graphs close to and far from having bounded arboricity.
Query complexity is nearly optimal up to poly-logarithmic factors.
Open question remains on improving the dependence on epsilon from quasi-polynomial to polynomial.
Abstract
In this paper we consider the problem of testing whether a graph has bounded arboricity. The family of graphs with bounded arboricity includes, among others, bounded-degree graphs, all minor-closed graph classes (e.g. planar graphs, graphs with bounded treewidth) and randomly generated preferential attachment graphs. Graphs with bounded arboricity have been studied extensively in the past, in particular since for many problems they allow for much more efficient algorithms and/or better approximation ratios. We present a tolerant tester in the sparse-graphs model. The sparse-graphs model allows access to degree queries and neighbor queries, and the distance is defined with respect to the actual number of edges. More specifically, our algorithm distinguishes between graphs that are -close to having arboricity and graphs that -far from having…
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