IWOCA 2026: 37TH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON COMBINATORIAL ALGORITHMS
PROGRAM

Days: Monday, June 8th Tuesday, June 9th Wednesday, June 10th Thursday, June 11th Friday, June 12th

Monday, June 8th

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14:20-15:20 Session 2: Parameterized algorithms for botanists
Location: Amphi 2
14:20
Exact Algorithms for Edge Deletion to Cactus (abstract)
14:40
Parameterized Algorithms for Computing MAD Trees (abstract)
15:00
Breadth-First Search Trees with Many or Few Leaves (abstract)
15:20-16:00 Session 3: Conflict-free problems
Location: Amphi 2
15:20
Conflict-Free Cuts in Planar and 3-Degenerate Graphs with 1-Regular Conflicts (abstract)
15:40
Improved Bounds on Proper Conflict-free Coloring of Graphs (abstract)
16:20-17:20 Session 5: Online algorithms
Location: Amphi 2
16:20
Minimizing the Weighted Makespan with Restarts on a Single Machine (abstract)
16:40
Removable Online Knapsack: Exploiting Recourse and Bounded Item Sizes (abstract)
17:00
Online Drone Coverage of Targets on a Line (abstract)
17:20-18:20 Session 6: Digraphs
Location: Amphi 2
17:20
A BFS-Width-2 Normal Form for PAFP on DAGS, with a Width-2 Contrast (abstract)
17:40
Solid-resolving sets on directed graphs (abstract)
18:00
Reachability in Graphs with Polynomially many Surface Non-Separating Cycles is in UL (abstract)
Tuesday, June 9th

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09:00-10:20 Session 7: Combinatorial algorithms and extremal theory
Location: Amphi 2
09:00
Cryptographic applications of combinatorial ranking algorithms for integer compositions (abstract)
09:20
One Sequence to Rule them All: O(1)-Time Parallel Generation of Mixed-Radix Gray Codes (abstract)
09:40
Bounds on Linear Turán Number for Trees (abstract)
10:00
Realizing Planar Linkages in Polygonal Domains (abstract)
10:40-11:30 Session 9: Plenary talk 1

Sergio Cabello - Computational Geometry with Predictions

Algorithms with predictions have received considerable attention in recent years. Given a problem instance and a prediction for the solution, we would like to devise a procedure that solves the problem
in such a way that the algorithm performs “better” when the prediction is “close” to the correct information. “Better” may be, for example, in terms of running time, approximation factor, or competitive ratio. Different measures of “closeness” may be used depending on the problem, or alternatively we may assume that predictions obey some probabilistic models.
I will explain some recent research in computational geometry that follows this paradigm of algorithms with predictions. In particular, we will look at the problem of searching for a target point at some unknown location when we get information about the approximate distance to the target and at the problem of computing the Delaunay triangulation in the plane when we are given a triangulation that is close to be the Delaunay triangulation.
Most of the material will be based on joint work with Timothy M. Chan and Panos Giannopoulos.

Location: Amphi 2
11:30-12:30 Session 10: Time and uncertainty
Location: Amphi 2
11:30
Set Selection with Uncertain Weights: Non-Adaptive Queries and Thresholds (abstract)
11:50
Enumerating Spanners in Directed Temporal Graphs (abstract)
12:10
Beer Path Problems in Temporal Graphs (abstract)
14:00-15:00 Session 12: Inversion
Chair:
Location: Amphi 2
14:00
Parameterized algorithms for k-Inversion (abstract)
14:20
On the (≤p)-inversion diameter of oriented graphs (abstract)
14:40
Tight upper bounds on color reversal by local inversions (abstract)
16:20-17:00 Session 15: Parameterized algorithms
Location: Amphi 2
16:20
The Parameterized Complexity of Scheduling with Precedence Delays: Shuffle Product and Directed Bandwidth (abstract)
16:40
Minimum Clique Bicoloring (abstract)
Wednesday, June 10th

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09:00-10:20 Session 17: Approximation
Location: Amphi 2
09:00
Minimizing Makespan in Sublinear Time via Weighted Random Sampling (abstract)
09:20
Fast Order Statistics with Group Inequality Testing (abstract)
09:40
Domination and Coverage Problems under Vulnerability Constraints (abstract)
10:00
Hardness of SetCover Reoptimization (abstract)
10:40-11:30 Session 19: Plenary talk 2

Neeldhara Misra - On Fairness with Graphical Valuations

The existence of envy-free up to any item (EFX) allocations is widely regarded as a central open problem in discrete fair division, and remains open beyond three agents. A recent line of work has carved out a structurally rich and surprisingly tractable corner of the landscape: the class of graphical valuations, introduced by Christodoulou, Fiat, Koutsoupias, and Sgouritsa (EC 2023), in which agents are vertices of a graph, items are edges, and each item is valued only by its two endpoint-agents. Their remarkable observation that EFX always exists on such instances has catalyzed a fast-moving body of follow-up work. This talk will survey this trajectory, leading to various intriguing questions this young area has surfaced. We hope to demonstrate that graphical valuations have become a productive meeting point for structural graph theory, parameterized complexity, and fair division.

Location: Amphi 2
11:30-12:30 Session 20: Structural graph theory
Location: Amphi 2
11:30
On (1,≤ ℓ)-locating-dominating codes in infinite triangular grid (abstract)
11:50
Vertex-critical graphs in subfamilies of (P_4+ ℓ P_1)-free graphs (abstract)
12:10
(Even hole, triangle)-free graphs revisited (abstract)
14:00-18:00 Excursion at Puy de Dôme
  • Bus departure at 14h00
  • Train for the top at 14h40
  • Return train at 17h20
  • Departure for the city center at 18h00
19:00-22:00 Gala dinner at Brasserie Madeleine

Address : 3 place de la Victoire, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France

Thursday, June 11th

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09:00-10:20 Session 22: Graph algorithms
Location: Amphi 2
09:00
Hardness Results on Bondage and Reinforcement Problems in Chordal Graphs (abstract)
09:20
An Algorithm for Monitoring Edge-geodetic Sets in Chordal Graphs (abstract)
09:40
Degree Realization with Maximum Matching (abstract)
10:00
On the Complexity of Vertex-Splitting Into an Interval Graph (abstract)
10:40-11:30 Session 24: Plenary talk 3

Pierre Fraigniaud - Algorithmic Meta-Theorems for Distributed Computing

Algorithmic meta-theorems can be viewed as theorems applying to large classes of algorithmic problems at once. An archetypal example of algorithmic meta-theorems is Courcelle's theorem (1990), which states that every graph property definable in the monadic second-order logic of graphs can be decided in linear time on graphs of bounded treewidth. Such a theorem is remarkable for many reasons, in particular for it establishes tight connections between sequential algorithms complexity, graph theory, and logic. It is only recently that meta-theorems have been formulated for distributed computing. This talk will survey some of the recent contributions in this field. In particular, it will address distributed decision for graph properties definable in first-order logic in graphs of bounded expansion, and distributed certification for graph properties definable in monadic second-order logic in graphs of bounded treewidth, as well as in graphs of bounded clique-width.

Location: Amphi 2
11:30-12:30 Session 25: Parameterized algorithms 2
Location: Amphi 2
11:30
Dominating Set with Quotas: Balancing Coverage and Constraints (abstract)
11:50
On the rank and the general position number in cycle convexity (abstract)
12:10
On the Complexity of Signed Domination (abstract)
Friday, June 12th

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