We revisit the problem of finding k paths with a minimum number of shared edges between two vertices of a graph. An edge is called shared if it is used in more than one of the k paths. We provide a ⌊k/2⌋-approximation algorithm for this problem, improving the best previous approximation factor of k - 1. We also provide the first approximation algorithm for the problem with a sublinear approximation factor of O(n3/4), where n is the number of vertices in the input graph. For sparse graphs, such as bounded-degree and planar graphs, we show that the approximation factor of our algorithm can be improved to O(√n). While the problem is NP-hard, and even hard to approximate to within an O(log n) factor, we show that the problem is polynomially solvable when k is a constant. This settles an open problem posed by Omran et al. regarding the complexity of the problem for small values of k. We present most of our results in a more general form where each edge of the graph has a sharing cost and a sharing capacity, and there is vulnerability parameter r that determines the number of times an edge can be used among different paths before it is counted as a shared/vulnerable edge. © Springer-Verlag 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Assadi, S., Emamjomeh-Zadeh, E., Norouzi-Fard, A., Yazdanbod, S., & Zarrabi-Zadeh, H. (2012). The minimum vulnerability problem. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 7676 LNCS, pp. 382–391). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-35261-4_41
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