Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!neat.cs.toronto.edu!marina From: marina@ai (Marina Haloulos) Newsgroups: ut.theory Subject: Professor Kazuo Iwama, Friday 15 September 1989: THEORY SEMINAR Message-ID: <89Sep12.151549edt.2165@neat.cs.toronto.edu> Date: 12 Sep 89 19:15:47 GMT Sender: list-admin@cs.toronto.edu Distribution: ut Lines: 26 Approved: ut.theory@mail.ai.toronto.edu Original-To: seminar-theory FLASH ANNOUNCEMENT (GB = Gailbraith Building, 35 St. George Street) ------------------------------------------------------------- THEORY SEMINAR GB119, at 3:00 p.m., Friday 15 September 1989 Professor Kazuo Iwama Kyoto Sangyo University An 0(log n) Parallel Connectivity Algorithm on the Mesh of Buses An 0(log n) parallel randomized algorithm for obtaining connected components of an undirected graph is presented. The model is not the common parallel random access machine (PRAM) but the mesh of buses (MB) which consists of n sup 2 RAMs on the two dimensional mesh of communication buses. Unlike PRAMs, MBs are considered to be current realizable in a similar degree as the mesh computer. Their computation power, however, appears to be much less than PRAMs; an obvious lower bound of sqrt N steps exists to simulate PRAM's one step (`N` processors). Nevertheless, our achievement of the 0(log n) depth for this fundamental graph problem, which is believed to be the best possible achieved only using PRAMs, demonstrates that the unrealistically idealized communication scheme of PRAMs is sometimes needlessly excessive for natural problems.