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Matching (graph theory)

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In the mathematical discipline of graph theory, a matching or independent edge set in an undirected graph is a set of edges without common vertices.[1] In other words, a subset of the edges is a matching if each vertex appears in at most one edge of that matching. Finding a matching in a bipartite graph can be treated as a network flow problem.

Definitions

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Given a graph G = (V, E), a matching M in G is a set of pairwise non-adjacent edges, none of which are loops; that is, no two edges share common vertices.

A vertex is matched (or saturated) if it is an endpoint of one of the edges in the matching. Otherwise the vertex is unmatched (or unsaturated).

A maximal matching is a matching M of a graph G that is not a subset of any other matching. A matching M of a graph G is maximal if every edge in G has a non-empty intersection with at least one edge in M. The following figure shows examples of maximal matchings (red) in three graphs.

A maximum matching (also known as maximum-cardinality matching[2]) is a matching that contains the largest possible number of edges. There may be many maximum matchings. The matching number of a graph G is the size of a maximum matching. Every maximum matching is maximal, but not every maximal matching is a maximum matching. The following figure shows examples of maximum matchings in the same three graphs.

A perfect matching is a matching that matches all vertices of the graph. That is, a matching is perfect if every vertex of the graph is incident to an edge of the matching. A matching is perfect if . Every perfect matching is maximum and hence maximal. In some literature, the term complete matching is used. In the above figure, only part (b) shows a perfect matching. A perfect matching is also a minimum-size edge cover. Thus, the size of a maximum matching is no larger than the size of a minimum edge cover: . A graph can only contain a perfect matching when the graph has an even number of vertices.

A near-perfect matching is one in which exactly one vertex is unmatched. Clearly, a graph can only contain a near-perfect matching when the graph has an odd number of vertices, and near-perfect matchings are maximum matchings. In the above figure, part (c) shows a near-perfect matching. If every vertex is unmatched by some near-perfect matching, then the graph is called factor-critical.

Given a matching M, an alternating path is a path that begins with an unmatched vertex[3] and whose edges belong alternately to the matching and not to the matching. An augmenting path is an alternating path that starts from and ends on free (unmatched) vertices. Berge's lemma states that a matching M is maximum if and only if there is no augmenting path with respect to M.

An induced matching is a matching that is the edge set of an induced subgraph.[4]

Properties

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In any graph without isolated vertices, the sum of the matching number and the edge covering number equals the number of vertices.[5] If there is a perfect matching, then both the matching number and the edge cover number are |V | / 2.

If A and B are two maximal matchings, then |A| ≤ 2|B| and |B| ≤ 2|A|. To see this, observe that each edge in B \ A can be adjacent to at most two edges in A \ B because A is a matching; moreover each edge in A \ B is adjacent to an edge in B \ A by maximality of B, hence

Further we deduce that

In particular, this shows that any maximal matching is a 2-approximation of a maximum matching and also a 2-approximation of a minimum maximal matching. This inequality is tight: for example, if G is a path with 3 edges and 4 vertices, the size of a minimum maximal matching is 1 and the size of a maximum matching is 2.

A spectral characterization of the matching number of a graph is given by Hassani Monfared and Mallik as follows: Let be a graph on vertices, and be distinct nonzero purely imaginary numbers where . Then the matching number of is if and only if (a) there is a real skew-symmetric matrix with graph and eigenvalues and zeros, and (b) all real skew-symmetric matrices with graph have at most nonzero eigenvalues.[6] Note that the (simple) graph of a real symmetric or skew-symmetric matrix of order has vertices and edges given by the nonozero off-diagonal entries of .

Matching polynomials

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A generating function of the number of k-edge matchings in a graph is called a matching polynomial. Let G be a graph and mk be the number of k-edge matchings. One matching polynomial of G is

Another definition gives the matching polynomial as

where n is the number of vertices in the graph. Each type has its uses; for more information see the article on matching polynomials.

Algorithms and computational complexity

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Maximum-cardinality matching

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A fundamental problem in combinatorial optimization is finding a maximum matching. This problem has various algorithms for different classes of graphs.

In an unweighted bipartite graph, the optimization problem is to find a maximum cardinality matching. The problem is solved by the Hopcroft-Karp algorithm in time O(VE) time, and there are more efficient randomized algorithms, approximation algorithms, and algorithms for special classes of graphs such as bipartite planar graphs, as described in the main article.

Maximum-weight matching

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In a weighted bipartite graph, the optimization problem is to find a maximum-weight matching; a dual problem is to find a minimum-weight matching. This problem is often called maximum weighted bipartite matching, or the assignment problem. The Hungarian algorithm solves the assignment problem and it was one of the beginnings of combinatorial optimization algorithms. It uses a modified shortest path search in the augmenting path algorithm. If the Bellman–Ford algorithm is used for this step, the running time of the Hungarian algorithm becomes , or the edge cost can be shifted with a potential to achieve running time with the Dijkstra algorithm and Fibonacci heap.[7]

In a non-bipartite weighted graph, the problem of maximum weight matching can be solved in time using Edmonds' blossom algorithm.

Maximal matchings

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A maximal matching can be found with a simple greedy algorithm. A maximum matching is also a maximal matching, and hence it is possible to find a largest maximal matching in polynomial time. However, no polynomial-time algorithm is known for finding a minimum maximal matching, that is, a maximal matching that contains the smallest possible number of edges.

A maximal matching with k edges is an edge dominating set with k edges. Conversely, if we are given a minimum edge dominating set with k edges, we can construct a maximal matching with k edges in polynomial time. Therefore, the problem of finding a minimum maximal matching is essentially equal to the problem of finding a minimum edge dominating set.[8] Both of these two optimization problems are known to be NP-hard; the decision versions of these problems are classical examples of NP-complete problems.[9] Both problems can be approximated within factor 2 in polynomial time: simply find an arbitrary maximal matching M.[10]

Counting problems

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The number of matchings in a graph is known as the Hosoya index of the graph. It is #P-complete to compute this quantity, even for bipartite graphs.[11] It is also #P-complete to count perfect matchings, even in bipartite graphs, because computing the permanent of an arbitrary 0–1 matrix (another #P-complete problem) is the same as computing the number of perfect matchings in the bipartite graph having the given matrix as its biadjacency matrix. However, there exists a fully polynomial time randomized approximation scheme for counting the number of bipartite matchings.[12] A remarkable theorem of Kasteleyn states that the number of perfect matchings in a planar graph can be computed exactly in polynomial time via the FKT algorithm.

The number of perfect matchings in a complete graph Kn (with n even) is given by the double factorial (n − 1)!!.[13] The numbers of matchings in complete graphs, without constraining the matchings to be perfect, are given by the telephone numbers.[14]

The number of perfect matchings in a graph is also known as the hafnian of its adjacency matrix.

Finding all maximally matchable edges

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One of the basic problems in matching theory is to find in a given graph all edges that may be extended to a maximum matching in the graph (such edges are called maximally matchable edges, or allowed edges). Algorithms for this problem include:

  • For general graphs, a deterministic algorithm in time and a randomized algorithm in time .[15][16]
  • For bipartite graphs, if a single maximum matching is found, a deterministic algorithm runs in time .[17]

Online bipartite matching

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The problem of developing an online algorithm for matching was first considered by Richard M. Karp, Umesh Vazirani, and Vijay Vazirani in 1990.[18]

In the online setting, nodes on one side of the bipartite graph arrive one at a time and must either be immediately matched to the other side of the graph or discarded. This is a natural generalization of the secretary problem and has applications to online ad auctions. The best online algorithm, for the unweighted maximization case with a random arrival model, attains a competitive ratio of 0.696.[19]

Characterizations

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Kőnig's theorem states that, in bipartite graphs, the maximum matching is equal in size to the minimum vertex cover. Via this result, the minimum vertex cover, maximum independent set, and maximum vertex biclique problems may be solved in polynomial time for bipartite graphs.

Hall's marriage theorem provides a characterization of bipartite graphs which have a perfect matching and the Tutte theorem provides a characterization for arbitrary graphs.

Applications

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Matching in general graphs

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Matching in bipartite graphs

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "is_matching". NetworkX 2.8.2 documentation. Retrieved 2022-05-31. Each node is incident to at most one edge in the matching. The edges are said to be independent.
  2. ^ Alan Gibbons, Algorithmic Graph Theory, Cambridge University Press, 1985, Chapter 5.
  3. ^ "Preview".
  4. ^ Cameron, Kathie (1989), "Induced matchings", Special issue for First Montreal Conference on Combinatorics and Computer Science, 1987, Discrete Applied Mathematics, 24 (1–3): 97–102, doi:10.1016/0166-218X(92)90275-F, MR 1011265
  5. ^ Gallai, Tibor (1959), "Über extreme Punkt- und Kantenmengen", Ann. Univ. Sci. Budapest. Eötvös Sect. Math., 2: 133–138.
  6. ^ Keivan Hassani Monfared and Sudipta Mallik, Theorem 3.6, Spectral characterization of matchings in graphs, Linear Algebra and its Applications 496 (2016) 407–419, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.laa.2016.02.004, https://arxiv.org/abs/1602.03590
  7. ^ Fredman, Michael L.; Tarjan, Robert Endre (1987), "Fibonacci heaps and their uses in improved network optimization algorithms", Journal of the ACM, 34 (3): 596–615, doi:10.1145/28869.28874, S2CID 7904683
  8. ^ Yannakakis, Mihalis; Gavril, Fanica (1980), "Edge dominating sets in graphs" (PDF), SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, 38 (3): 364–372, doi:10.1137/0138030.
  9. ^ Garey, Michael R.; Johnson, David S. (1979), Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness, W.H. Freeman, ISBN 0-7167-1045-5. Edge dominating set (decision version) is discussed under the dominating set problem, which is the problem GT2 in Appendix A1.1. Minimum maximal matching (decision version) is the problem GT10 in Appendix A1.1.
  10. ^ Ausiello, Giorgio; Crescenzi, Pierluigi; Gambosi, Giorgio; Kann, Viggo; Marchetti-Spaccamela, Alberto; Protasi, Marco (2003), Complexity and Approximation: Combinatorial Optimization Problems and Their Approximability Properties, Springer. Minimum edge dominating set (optimisation version) is the problem GT3 in Appendix B (page 370). Minimum maximal matching (optimisation version) is the problem GT10 in Appendix B (page 374). See also Minimum Edge Dominating Set and Minimum Maximal Matching in the web compendium.
  11. ^ Leslie Valiant, The Complexity of Enumeration and Reliability Problems, SIAM J. Comput., 8(3), 410–421
  12. ^ Bezáková, Ivona; Štefankovič, Daniel; Vazirani, Vijay V.; Vigoda, Eric (2008). "Accelerating Simulated Annealing for the Permanent and Combinatorial Counting Problems". SIAM Journal on Computing. 37 (5): 1429–1454. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.80.687. doi:10.1137/050644033. S2CID 755231.
  13. ^ Callan, David (2009), A combinatorial survey of identities for the double factorial, arXiv:0906.1317, Bibcode:2009arXiv0906.1317C.
  14. ^ Tichy, Robert F.; Wagner, Stephan (2005), "Extremal problems for topological indices in combinatorial chemistry" (PDF), Journal of Computational Biology, 12 (7): 1004–1013, doi:10.1089/cmb.2005.12.1004, PMID 16201918.
  15. ^ Rabin, Michael O.; Vazirani, Vijay V. (1989), "Maximum matchings in general graphs through randomization", Journal of Algorithms, 10 (4): 557–567, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.228.1996, doi:10.1016/0196-6774(89)95005-9
  16. ^ Cheriyan, Joseph (1997), "Randomized algorithms for problems in matching theory", SIAM Journal on Computing, 26 (6): 1635–1655, doi:10.1137/S0097539793256223
  17. ^ Tassa, Tamir (2012), "Finding all maximally-matchable edges in a bipartite graph", Theoretical Computer Science, 423: 50–58, doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2011.12.071
  18. ^ Karp, Richard M.; Vazirani, Umesh V.; Vazirani, Vijay V. (1990). "An optimal algorithm for on-line bipartite matching" (PDF). Proceedings of the 22nd Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 1990). pp. 352–358. doi:10.1145/100216.100262. ISBN 0-89791-361-2.
  19. ^ Mahdian, Mohammad; Yan, Qiqi (2011). "Online bipartite matching with random arrivals: an approach based on strongly factor-revealing LPs". Proceedings of the Forty-Third Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing. pp. 597–606. doi:10.1145/1993636.1993716.
  20. ^ See, e.g., Trinajstić, Nenad; Klein, Douglas J.; Randić, Milan (1986), "On some solved and unsolved problems of chemical graph theory", International Journal of Quantum Chemistry, 30 (S20): 699–742, doi:10.1002/qua.560300762.

Further reading

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  1. Lovász, László; Plummer, M. D. (1986), Matching Theory, Annals of Discrete Mathematics, vol. 29, North-Holland, ISBN 0-444-87916-1, MR 0859549
  2. Thomas H. Cormen, Charles E. Leiserson, Ronald L. Rivest and Clifford Stein (2001), Introduction to Algorithms (second ed.), MIT Press and McGraw–Hill, Chapter 26, pp. 643–700, ISBN 0-262-53196-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. András Frank (2004). On Kuhn's Hungarian Method – A tribute from Hungary (PDF) (Technical report). Egerváry Research Group.
  4. Michael L. Fredman and Robert E. Tarjan (1987), "Fibonacci heaps and their uses in improved network optimization algorithms", Journal of the ACM, 34 (3): 595–615, doi:10.1145/28869.28874, S2CID 7904683.
  5. S. J. Cyvin & Ivan Gutman (1988), Kekule Structures in Benzenoid Hydrocarbons, Springer-Verlag
  6. Marek Karpinski and Wojciech Rytter (1998), Fast Parallel Algorithms for Graph Matching Problems, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-850162-6
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