220 research outputs found

    Combinatorial Problems on HH-graphs

    Full text link
    Bir\'{o}, Hujter, and Tuza introduced the concept of HH-graphs (1992), intersection graphs of connected subgraphs of a subdivision of a graph HH. They naturally generalize many important classes of graphs, e.g., interval graphs and circular-arc graphs. We continue the study of these graph classes by considering coloring, clique, and isomorphism problems on HH-graphs. We show that for any fixed HH containing a certain 3-node, 6-edge multigraph as a minor that the clique problem is APX-hard on HH-graphs and the isomorphism problem is isomorphism-complete. We also provide positive results on HH-graphs. Namely, when HH is a cactus the clique problem can be solved in polynomial time. Also, when a graph GG has a Helly HH-representation, the clique problem can be solved in polynomial time. Finally, we observe that one can use treewidth techniques to show that both the kk-clique and list kk-coloring problems are FPT on HH-graphs. These FPT results apply more generally to treewidth-bounded graph classes where treewidth is bounded by a function of the clique number

    Graphs with at most two moplexes

    Full text link
    A moplex is a natural graph structure that arises when lifting Dirac's classical theorem from chordal graphs to general graphs. However, while every non-complete graph has at least two moplexes, little is known about structural properties of graphs with a bounded number of moplexes. The study of these graphs is motivated by the parallel between moplexes in general graphs and simplicial modules in chordal graphs: Unlike in the moplex setting, properties of chordal graphs with a bounded number of simplicial modules are well understood. For instance, chordal graphs having at most two simplicial modules are interval. In this work we initiate an investigation of kk-moplex graphs, which are defined as graphs containing at most kk moplexes. Of particular interest is the smallest nontrivial case k=2k=2, which forms a counterpart to the class of interval graphs. As our main structural result, we show that the class of connected 22-moplex graphs is sandwiched between the classes of proper interval graphs and cocomparability graphs; moreover, both inclusions are tight for hereditary classes. From a complexity theoretic viewpoint, this leads to the natural question of whether the presence of at most two moplexes guarantees a sufficient amount of structure to efficiently solve problems that are known to be intractable on cocomparability graphs, but not on proper interval graphs. We develop new reductions that answer this question negatively for two prominent problems fitting this profile, namely Graph Isomorphism and Max-Cut. On the other hand, we prove that every connected 22-moplex graph contains a Hamiltonian path, generalising the same property of connected proper interval graphs. Furthermore, for graphs with a higher number of moplexes, we lift the previously known result that graphs without asteroidal triples have at most two moplexes to the more general setting of larger asteroidal sets

    04221 Abstracts Collection -- Robust and Approximative Algorithms on Particular Graph Classes

    Get PDF
    From 23.05.04 to 28.05.04, the Dagstuhl Seminar 04221 ``Robust and Approximative Algorithms on Particular Graph Classes\u27\u27 was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available

    Computing Role Assignments of Proper Interval Graphs in Polynomial Time

    Get PDF
    A homomorphism from a graph G to a graph R is locally surjective if its restriction to the neighborhood of each vertex of G is surjective. Such a homomorphism is also called an R-role assignment of G. Role assignments have applications in distributed computing, social network theory, and topological graph theory. The Role Assignment problem has as input a pair of graphs (G,R) and asks whether G has an R-role assignment. This problem is NP-complete already on input pairs (G,R) where R is a path on three vertices. So far, the only known non-trivial tractable case consists of input pairs (G,R) where G is a tree. We present a polynomial time algorithm that solves Role Assignment on all input pairs (G,R) where G is a proper interval graph. Thus we identify the first graph class other than trees on which the problem is tractable. As a complementary result, we show that the problem is Graph Isomorphism-hard on chordal graphs, a superclass of proper interval graphs and trees

    On retracts, absolute retracts, and folds in cographs

    Full text link
    Let G and H be two cographs. We show that the problem to determine whether H is a retract of G is NP-complete. We show that this problem is fixed-parameter tractable when parameterized by the size of H. When restricted to the class of threshold graphs or to the class of trivially perfect graphs, the problem becomes tractable in polynomial time. The problem is also soluble when one cograph is given as an induced subgraph of the other. We characterize absolute retracts of cographs.Comment: 15 page
    corecore