Trust Signal Map
Public graph snapshot linking moderation, structured review and trust-aware ranking.
Graph explorer
We initiate the study of property testing of submodularity on the boolean hypercube. Submodular functions come up in a variety of applications in combinatorial optimization. For a vast range of algorithms, the existence of an oracle to a submodular function is assumed. But how does one check if this oracle indeed represents a submodular function? Consider a function f:{0,1}^n \rightarrow R. The distance to submodularity is the minimum fraction of values of $f$ that need to be modified to make f submodular. If this distance is more than epsilon > 0, then we say that f is epsilon-far from being submodular. The aim is to have an efficient procedure that, given input f that is epsilon-far from being submodular, certifies that f is not submodular. We analyze a very natural tester for this problem, and prove that it runs in subexponential time. This gives the first non-trivial tester for submodularity. On the other hand, we prove an interesting lower bound (that is, unfortunately, quite far from the upper bound) suggesting that this tester cannot be very efficient in terms of epsilon. This involves non-trivial examples of functions which are far from submodular and yet do not exhibit too
preprint / 2010