Abstract
Many known optimal NP-hardness of approximation results are reductions from a problem called Label-Cover. The input is a bipartite graph G = (L, R, E) and each edge e = (x, y) ∈ E carries a projection πe that maps labels to x to labels to y. The objective is to find a labeling of the vertices that satisfies as many of the projections as possible. It is believed that the best approximation ratio efficiently achievable for Label-Cover is of the form N−c where N = nk, n is the number of vertices, k is the number of labels, and 0 0, a polynomial-time approximation algorithm for semi-random Label-Cover whose approximation ratio is [EQUATION]. In our semi-random model, the input graph is random (or even just expanding), and the projections on the edges are arbitrary.For worst-case Label-Cover we show a polynomial-time algorithm whose approximation ratio is roughly N−0.233. The previous best efficient approximation ratio was N−0.25. We present some evidence towards an N−c by constructing integrality gaps for NΩ(1) rounds of the Sum-of-squares/Lasserre hierarchy of the natural relaxation of Label Cover. For general 2CSP the log density threshold is N−0.25, and we give a polynomial-time algorithm in the semi-random model whose approximation ratio is N−0.25+e for any e > 0.
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