John S. Lew
Mathematical Biosciences
We present algorithms and lower bounds for the Longest Increasing Subsequence (LIS) and Longest Common Subsequence (LCS) problems in the data-streaming model. To decide if the LIS of a given stream of elements drawn from an alphabet ∑ has length at least k, we discuss a one-pass algorithm using O(k og |∑|) space, with update time either O(log k:) or O(log log |σ|); for |σ| = O(1), we can achieve O(log k) space and constant-time updates. We also prove a lower bound of ω(k) on the space requirement for this problem for general alphabets E, even when the input stream is a permutation of ∑. For finding the actual LIS, we give a [log(1 + 1/epsi;)]-pass algorithm using O(k 1+ε log |∑|) space, for any ε > 0. For LCS, there is a trivial Θ(1)-approximate O(log n)-space streaming algorithm when |∑| = O(1). For general alphabets ∑, the problem is much harder. We prove several lower bounds on the LCS problem, of which the strongest is the following: it is necessary to use Ω(n/ρ 2) space to approximate the LCS of two n-element streams to within a factor of p, even if the streams are permutations of each other. © Springer Science + Business Media, LLC 2006.
John S. Lew
Mathematical Biosciences
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