AbstractIn combinatorial optimization problems that exhibit phase transition it is a frequently observed phenomenon that the algorithmically hard instances are concentrated around the phase transition region. The location, the size and sometimes the mere existence of this critical region, however, may depend on several factors: on the choice of an “order parameter”, on the solving algorithm or on the probabilistic model. We investigate a large class of graph optimization problems and show that this concentration of hardness is in fact a more general phenomenon, if we focus on the complexity of finding or approximating the optimal value (such as the size of a maximum clique), rather than finding a witness (an actual maximum clique). Specific...