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        <dc:title>Maximizing a submodular function with viability constraints</dc:title>
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        <bibo:abstract>We study the problem of maximizing a monotone submodular function with viability constraints. This problem originates from computational biology, where we are given a phylogenetic tree over a set of species and a directed graph, the so-called food web, encoding viability constraints between these species. These food webs usually have constant depth. The goal is to select a subset of k species that satisfies the viability constraints and has maximal phylogenetic diversity. As this problem is known to be NP-hard, we investigate approximation algorithms. We present the first constant factor approximation algorithm if the depth is constant. Its approximation ratio is (1−1e√). This algorithm not only applies to phylogenetic trees with viability constraints but for arbitrary monotone submodular set functions with viability constraints. Second, we show that there is no (1−1/e+ϵ)-approximation algorithm for our problem setting (even for additive functions) and that there is no approximation algorithm for a slight extension of this setting.</bibo:abstract>
        <bibo:volume>77</bibo:volume>
        <bibo:issue>1</bibo:issue>
        <bibo:startPage>152-172</bibo:startPage>
        <bibo:endPage>152-172</bibo:endPage>
        <dc:publisher>Springer Nature</dc:publisher>
        <bibo:doi rdf:resource="10.1007/s00453-015-0066-y" />
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