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In the Minimum Consistent Subset (MCS) problem, we are presented with a connected simple undirected graph G= (V, E), consisting of a vertex set V of size n and an edge set E. Each vertex in V is assigned a color from the set \1, 2, , c\. The objective is to determine a subset V' V with minimum possible cardinality, such that for every vertex v V, at least one of its nearest neighbors in V' (measured in terms of the hop distance) shares the same color as v. The decision problem, indicating whether there exists a subset V' of cardinality at most l for some positive integer l, is known to be NP-complete even for planar graphs. In this paper, we establish that the MCS problem for trees, when the number of colors c is considered an input parameter, is NP-complete. We propose a fixed-parameter tractable (FPT) algorithm for MCS on trees running in O (2^6cn⁶) time, significantly improving the currently best-known algorithm whose running time is O (2^4cn^2c+3). In an effort to comprehensively understand the computational complexity of the MCS problem across different graph classes, we extend our investigation to interval graphs. We show that it remains NP-complete for interval graphs, thus enriching graph classes where MCS remains intractable.
Banik et al. (Tue,) studied this question.