Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
434491 Theoretical Computer Science 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Canadian traveler problem (CTP) is the problem of traversing a given graph, where some of the edges may be blocked–a state which is revealed only upon reaching an incident vertex. Originally stated by Papadimitriou and Yannakakis (1991) [1], the adversarial version of the CTP was shown to be PSPACE-complete, with the stochastic version shown to be in PSPACE and #P-hard.We show that the stochastic CTP is also PSPACE-complete: initially proving PSPACE-hardness for the dependent version of the stochastic CTP, and proceeding with gadgets that allow us to extend the proof to the independent case.Since for disjoint-path graphs, the CTP can be solved in polynomial time, we examine the complexity of the more general remote-sensing CTP, and show that it is NP-hard even for disjoint-path graphs.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics