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Discrete Mathematics and theoretical computer science are closely
linked research areas with strong impacts on applications and
various other scientific disciplines. Both fields deeply cross
fertilize each other. One of the persons who particularly
contributed to building bridges between these and many other areas
is László Lovász, whose outstanding scientific work has defined
and shaped many research directions in the past 40 years. A number
of friends and colleagues, all top authorities in their fields of
expertise gathered at the two conferences in August 2008 in
Hungary, celebrating Lovász' 60th birthday. It was a real fete of
combinatorics and computer science. Some of these plenary speakers
submitted their research or survey papers prior to the conferences.
These are included in the volume "Building Bridges". The other
speakers were able to finish their contribution only later, these
are collected in the present volume.
Since the publication of the first edition of our book, geometric
algorithms and combinatorial optimization have kept growing at the
same fast pace as before. Nevertheless, we do not feel that the
ongoing research has made this book outdated. Rather, it seems that
many of the new results build on the models, algorithms, and
theorems presented here. For instance, the celebrated
Dyer-Frieze-Kannan algorithm for approximating the volume of a
convex body is based on the oracle model of convex bodies and uses
the ellipsoid method as a preprocessing technique. The polynomial
time equivalence of optimization, separation, and membership has
become a commonly employed tool in the study of the complexity of
combinatorial optimization problems and in the newly developing
field of computational convexity. Implementations of the basis
reduction algorithm can be found in various computer algebra
software systems. On the other hand, several of the open problems
discussed in the first edition are still unsolved. For example,
there are still no combinatorial polynomial time algorithms known
for minimizing a submodular function or finding a maximum clique in
a perfect graph. Moreover, despite the success of the interior
point methods for the solution of explicitly given linear programs
there is still no method known that solves implicitly given linear
programs, such as those described in this book, and that is both
practically and theoretically efficient. In particular, it is not
known how to adapt interior point methods to such linear programs.
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