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The Family Holiday Gathering Problem or Fair and Periodic Scheduling of Independent Sets

Published 10 Aug 2014 in cs.DS | (1408.2279v1)

Abstract: We introduce and examine the {\em Holiday Gathering Problem} which models the difficulty that couples have when trying to decide with which parents should they spend the holiday. Our goal is to schedule the family gatherings so that the parents that will be {\em happy}, i.e.\ all their children will be home {\em simultaneously} for the holiday festivities, while minimizing the number of consecutive holidays in which parents are not happy. The holiday gathering problem is closely related to several classical problems in computer science, such as the {\em dining philosophers problem} on a general graph and periodic scheduling,and has applications in scheduling of transmissions made by cellular radios. We also show interesting connections between periodic scheduling, coloring, and universal prefix free encodings. The combinatorial definition of the Holiday Gathering Problem is: given a graph $G$, find an infinite sequence of independent-sets of $G$. The objective function is to minimize, for every node $v$, the maximal gap between two appearances of $v$. In good solutions this gap depends on local properties of the node (i.e., its degree) and the the solution should be periodic, i.e.\ a node appears every fixed number of periods. We show a coloring-based construction where the period of each node colored with the $c$ is at most $2{1+\log*c}\cdot\prod_{i=0}{\log*c} \log{(i)}c$ (where $\log{(i)}$ means iterating the $\log$ function $i$ times). This is achieved via a connection with {\it prefix-free encodings}. We prove that this is the best possible for coloring-based solutions. We also show a construction with period at most $2d$ for a node of degree $d$.

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