The UGC hardness threshold of the Lp grothendieck problem

Guy Kindler, Assaf Naor, Gideon Schechtman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

For p ≥ 2 we consider the problem of, given an n x n matrix A = (a ij) whose diagonal entries vanish, approximating in polynomial time the number Optp(A):= max { σi, j=1n aijxixj: (x1,....,xn) ∈ ℝn ∧ (σi=1n|x i|p)1/p≤1}.When p = 2 this is simply the problem of computing the maximum eigenvalue of A, whereas for p = ∞ (actually it suffices to take p≈ log n) it is the Grothendieck problem on the complete graph, which was shown to have a 0(log n) approximation algorithm in Nemirovski et al. [Nemirovski, A., C. Roos, T. Terlaky. 1999. On maximization of quadratic form over intersection of ellipsoids with common center. Math. Program. Ser. A 86(3) 463-473], Megretski [Megretski, A. 2001. Relaxations of quadratic programs in operator theory and system analysis. Systems, Approximation, Singular Integral Operators, and Related Topics (Bordeaux, 2000), Vol. 129. Operator Theory Advances and Applications. Birkhäuser, Basel, 365-392], Charikar and Wirth [Charikar, M., A. Wirth. 2004. Maximizing quadratic programs: Extending Grothendieck's inequality. Proc. 45th Annual Sympos. Foundations Comput. Sci., IEEE Computer Society, 54-60] and was used in the work of Charikar and Wirth noted above, to design the best known algorithm for the problem of computing the maximum correlation in correlation clustering. Thus the problem of approximating Optp(A) interpolates between the spectral (p = 2) case and the correlation clustering (p =∞ ) case. From a physics point of view this problem corresponds to computing the ground states of spin glasses in a hard-wall potential well. We design a polynomial time algorithm which, given p ≥ 2 and an n x n matrix A = (aij) with zeros on the diagonal, computes Optp(A) up to a factor p/e + 30logp. On the other hand, assuming the unique games conjecture (UGC) we show that it is NP-hard to approximate Optp(A) up to a factor smaller than p/e + 14. Hence as p --∞ the UGC-hardness threshold for computing Optp(A) is exactly (p/e)(1 + o(1)).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)267-283
Number of pages17
JournalMathematics of Operations Research
Volume35
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2010

Keywords

  • Approximation algorithms
  • Quadratic programming
  • Unique games hardness

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Mathematics
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Management Science and Operations Research

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