Parameterized complexity and approximation issues for the colorful components problems

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Abstract

The quest for colorful components (connected components where each color is associated with at most one vertex) inside a vertexcolored graph has been widely considered in the last ten years. Here we consider two variants, Minimum Colorful Components (MCC) and Maximum Edges in transitive Closure (MEC), introduced in the context of orthology gene identification in bioinformatics. The input of both MCC and MEC is a vertex-colored graph. MCC asks for the removal of a subset of edges, so that the resulting graph is partitioned in the minimum number of colorful connected components; MEC asks for the removal of a subset of edges, so that the resulting graph is partitioned in colorful connected components and the number of edges in the transitive closure of such a graph is maximized. We study the parameterized and approximation complexity of MCC and MEC, for general and restricted instances.

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Dondi, R., & Sikora, F. (2016). Parameterized complexity and approximation issues for the colorful components problems. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 9709, pp. 261–270). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40189-8_27

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