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Maximizing Quadratic Programs: Extending Grothendieck's Inequality
Rome, Italy October 17-October 19
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/FOCS.2004.3945th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundat ...
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Moses Charikar, Princeton University
Anthony Wirth, Princeton University

This paper considers the following type of quadratic programming problem. Given an arbitrary matrix A, whose diagonal elements are zero, find x ∊ {-1, 1}^n such that x^TAx is maximized. Our approximation algorithm for this problem uses the canonical semidefinite relaxation and returns a solution whose ratio to the optimum is in Ω(1/log n). This quadratic programming problem can be seen as an extension to that of maximizing x^TAy (where y's components are also ±1). Grothendieck's inequality states that the ratio of the optimum value of the latter problem to the optimum of its canonical semidefinite relaxation is bounded below by a constant.

The study of this type of quadratic program arose from a desire to approximate the maximum correlation in correlation clustering. Nothing substantive was known about this problem; we present an Ω(1/log n) approximation, based on our quadratic programming algorithm.

We can also guarantee that our quadratic programming algorithm returns a solution to the MAXCUT problem that has a significant advantage over a random assignment.

Citation:
Moses Charikar, Anthony Wirth, "Maximizing Quadratic Programs: Extending Grothendieck's Inequality," focs, pp.54-60, 45th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS'04), 2004
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