@online{Balliu_arXiv1904.05627,
TITLE = {Locality of Not-So-Weak Coloring},
AUTHOR = {Balliu, Alkida and Hirvonen, Juho and Lenzen, Christoph and Olivetti, Dennis and Suomela, Jukka},
LANGUAGE = {eng},
URL = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1904.05627},
EPRINT = {1904.05627},
EPRINTTYPE = {arXiv},
YEAR = {2019},
ABSTRACT = {Many graph problems are locally checkable: a solution is globally feasible if<br>it looks valid in all constant-radius neighborhoods. This idea is formalized in<br>the concept of locally checkable labelings (LCLs), introduced by Naor and<br>Stockmeyer (1995). Recently, Chang et al. (2016) showed that in bounded-degree<br>graphs, every LCL problem belongs to one of the following classes:<br> -- "Easy": solvable in $O(\log^* n)$ rounds with both deterministic and<br>randomized distributed algorithms.<br> -- "Hard": requires at least $\Omega(\log n)$ rounds with deterministic and<br>$\Omega(\log \log n)$ rounds with randomized distributed algorithms.<br> Hence for any parameterized LCL problem, when we move from local problems<br>towards global problems, there is some point at which complexity suddenly jumps<br>from easy to hard. For example, for vertex coloring in $d$-regular graphs it is<br>now known that this jump is at precisely $d$ colors: coloring with $d+1$ colors<br>is easy, while coloring with $d$ colors is hard.<br> However, it is currently poorly understood where this jump takes place when<br>one looks at defective colorings. To study this question, we define $k$-partial<br>$c$-coloring as follows: nodes are labeled with numbers between $1$ and $c$,<br>and every node is incident to at least $k$ properly colored edges.<br> It is known that $1$-partial $2$-coloring (a.k.a. weak $2$-coloring) is easy<br>for any $d \ge 1$. As our main result, we show that $k$-partial $2$-coloring<br>becomes hard as soon as $k \ge 2$, no matter how large a $d$ we have.<br> We also show that this is fundamentally different from $k$-partial<br>$3$-coloring: no matter which $k \ge 3$ we choose, the problem is always hard<br>for $d = k$ but it becomes easy when $d \gg k$. The same was known previously<br>for partial $c$-coloring with $c \ge 4$, but the case of $c < 4$ was open.<br>},
}
