Contribution Summary
Per the contribution guidelines, I am submitting 10 non-trivial reduction rules for authorship consideration.
Problem Models Filed (4)
| Issue |
Problem |
Category |
| #108 |
LongestCommonSubsequence |
String/Sequence |
| #114 |
Knapsack |
Optimization |
| #117 |
GraphPartitioning |
Graph |
| #122 |
SteinerTree |
Network Design |
Reduction Rules Filed (10)
| Issue |
Source → Target |
Domain Crossing |
| #109 |
LCS → MaximumIndependentSet |
String → Graph |
| #110 |
LCS → ILP |
String → Algebraic |
| #126 |
KSatisfiability → SubsetSum |
Formula → Number Theory |
| #116 |
Knapsack → QUBO |
Optimization → Algebraic |
| #125 |
Knapsack → ClosestVectorProblem |
Optimization → Lattice Theory |
| #118 |
GraphPartitioning → ILP |
Graph → Algebraic |
| #119 |
GraphPartitioning → QUBO |
Graph → Algebraic |
| #120 |
GraphPartitioning → MaxCut |
Graph → Graph (constrained → unconstrained) |
| #121 |
GraphPartitioning → SpinGlass |
Graph → Physics |
| #123 |
SteinerTree → ILP |
Network → Algebraic |
Highlights
- Cross-domain reductions: KSatisfiability → SubsetSum (Karp's original, S-tier) and Knapsack → CVP (Lagarias-Odlyzko, S-tier) bridge fundamentally different mathematical domains
- New graph topology: GraphPartitioning → MaxCut creates a new path into the MaxCut node; SubsetSum gets its first incoming edge
- Industrial relevance: GraphPartitioning (VLSI, parallel computing), SteinerTree (network design), Knapsack (resource allocation)
Contribution Summary
Per the contribution guidelines, I am submitting 10 non-trivial reduction rules for authorship consideration.
Problem Models Filed (4)
Reduction Rules Filed (10)
Highlights