- Series
- Combinatorics Seminar
- Time
- Friday, January 13, 2012 - 3:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Prasad Raghavendra – School of Computer Science, Georgia Tech
- Organizer
- Prasad Tetali
A small set expander is a graph where every set of sufficiently small
size has near perfect edge expansion. This talk concerns the computational
problem of distinguishing a small set-expander, from a graph containing a
small non-expanding set of vertices. This problem henceforth referred to
as the Small-Set Expansion problem has proven to be intimately connected to
the complexity of large classes of combinatorial optimization problems.
More precisely, the small set expansion problem can be shown to be
directly related to the well-known Unique Games Conjecture -- a
conjecture that has numerous implications in approximation algorithms.
In this talk, we motivate the problem, and survey recent work consisting of
algorithms and interesting connections within graph expansion, and its
relation to Unique Games Conjecture.