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Planted Bipartite Graph Detection

Abstract

We consider the task of detecting a hidden bipartite subgraph in a given random graph. This is formulated as a hypothesis testing problem, under the null hypothesis, the graph is a realization of an Erd\H{o}s-R\'{e}nyi random graph over nn vertices with edge density qq. Under the alternative, there exists a planted kR×kLk_{\mathsf{R}} \times k_{\mathsf{L}} bipartite subgraph with edge density p>qp>q. We characterize the statistical and computational barriers for this problem. Specifically, we derive information-theoretic lower bounds, and design and analyze optimal algorithms matching those bounds, in both the dense regime, where p,q=Θ(1)p,q = \Theta\left(1\right), and the sparse regime where p,q=Θ(nα),α(0,2]p,q = \Theta\left(n^{-\alpha}\right), \alpha \in \left(0,2\right]. We also consider the problem of testing in polynomial-time. As is customary in similar structured high-dimensional problems, our model undergoes an "easy-hard-impossible" phase transition and computational constraints penalize the statistical performance. To provide an evidence for this statistical computational gap, we prove computational lower bounds based on the low-degree conjecture, and show that the class of low-degree polynomials algorithms fail in the conjecturally hard region.

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