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Lower Bounds for Induced Cycle Detection in Distributed Computing

Abstract

The distributed subgraph detection asks, for a fixed graph HH, whether the nn-node input graph contains HH as a subgraph or not. In the standard CONGEST model of distributed computing, the complexity of clique/cycle detection and listing has received a lot of attention recently. In this paper we consider the induced variant of subgraph detection, where the goal is to decide whether the nn-node input graph contains HH as an \emph{induced} subgraph or not. We first show a Ω~(n)\tilde{\Omega}(n) lower bound for detecting the existence of an induced kk-cycle for any k4k\geq 4 in the CONGEST model. This lower bound is tight for k=4k=4, and shows that the induced variant of kk-cycle detection is much harder than the non-induced version. This lower bound is proved via a reduction from two-party communication complexity. We complement this result by showing that for 5k75\leq k\leq 7, this Ω~(n)\tilde{\Omega}(n) lower bound cannot be improved via the two-party communication framework. We then show how to prove stronger lower bounds for larger values of kk. More precisely, we show that detecting an induced kk-cycle for any k8k\geq 8 requires Ω~(n2Θ(1/k))\tilde{\Omega}(n^{2-\Theta{(1/k)}}) rounds in the CONGEST model, nearly matching the known upper bound O~(n2Θ(1/k))\tilde{O}(n^{2-\Theta{(1/k)}}) of the general kk-node subgraph detection (which also applies to the induced version) by Eden, Fiat, Fischer, Kuhn, and Oshman~[DISC 2019]. Finally, we investigate the case where HH is the diamond (the diamond is obtained by adding an edge to a 4-cycle, or equivalently removing an edge from a 4-clique), and show non-trivial upper and lower bounds on the complexity of the induced version of diamond detecting and listing.

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