864 research outputs found
Clique‐width: Harnessing the power of atoms
Many NP-complete graph problems are polynomial-time solvable on graph classes of bounded clique-width. Several of these problems are polynomial-time solvable on a hereditary graph class if they are so on the atoms (graphs with no clique cut-set) of . Hence, we initiate a systematic study into boundedness of clique-width of atoms of hereditary graph classes. A graph is -free if is not an induced subgraph of , and it is -free if it is both -free and -free. A class of -free graphs has bounded clique-width if and only if its atoms have this property. This is no longer true for -free graphs, as evidenced by one known example. We prove the existence of another such pair and classify the boundedness of clique-width on -free atoms for all but 18 cases
Between Treewidth and Clique-width
Many hard graph problems can be solved efficiently when restricted to graphs
of bounded treewidth, and more generally to graphs of bounded clique-width. But
there is a price to be paid for this generality, exemplified by the four
problems MaxCut, Graph Coloring, Hamiltonian Cycle and Edge Dominating Set that
are all FPT parameterized by treewidth but none of which can be FPT
parameterized by clique-width unless FPT = W[1], as shown by Fomin et al [7,
8]. We therefore seek a structural graph parameter that shares some of the
generality of clique-width without paying this price. Based on splits, branch
decompositions and the work of Vatshelle [18] on Maximum Matching-width, we
consider the graph parameter sm-width which lies between treewidth and
clique-width. Some graph classes of unbounded treewidth, like
distance-hereditary graphs, have bounded sm-width. We show that MaxCut, Graph
Coloring, Hamiltonian Cycle and Edge Dominating Set are all FPT parameterized
by sm-width
Clique-width : harnessing the power of atoms.
Many NP-complete graph problems are polynomial-time solvable on graph classes of bounded clique-width. Several of these problems are polynomial-time solvable on a hereditary graph class G if they are so on the atoms (graphs with no clique cut-set) of G . Hence, we initiate a systematic study into boundedness of clique-width of atoms of hereditary graph classes. A graph G is H-free if H is not an induced subgraph of G, and it is (H1,H2) -free if it is both H1 -free and H2 -free. A class of H-free graphs has bounded clique-width if and only if its atoms have this property. This is no longer true for (H1,H2) -free graphs, as evidenced by one known example. We prove the existence of another such pair (H1,H2) and classify the boundedness of clique-width on (H1,H2) -free atoms for all but 18 cases
MSO Undecidability for some Hereditary Classes of Unbounded Clique-Width
Seese's conjecture for finite graphs states that monadic second-order logic
(MSO) is undecidable on all graph classes of unbounded clique-width. We show
that to establish this it would suffice to show that grids of unbounded size
can be interpreted in two families of graph classes: minimal hereditary classes
of unbounded clique-width; and antichains of unbounded clique-width under the
induced subgraph relation. We explore a number of known examples of the former
category and establish that grids of unbounded size can indeed be interpreted
in them.Comment: 23 page
Clique-width for graph classes closed under complementation.
Clique-width is an important graph parameter due to its algorithmic and structural properties. A graph class is hereditary if it can be characterized by a (not necessarily finite) set H of forbidden induced subgraphs. We initiate a systematic study into the boundedness of clique-width of hereditary graph classes closed under complementation. First, we extend the known classification for the |H|=1 case by classifying the boundedness of clique-width for every set H of self-complementary graphs. We then completely settle the |H|=2 case. In particular, we determine one new class of (H1, complement of H1)-free graphs of bounded clique-width (as a side effect, this leaves only six classes of (H1, H2)-free graphs, for which it is not known whether their clique-width is bounded). Once we have obtained the classification of the |H|=2 case, we research the effect of forbidding self-complementary graphs on the boundedness of clique-width. Surprisingly, we show that for a set F of self-complementary graphs on at least five vertices, the classification of the boundedness of clique-width for ({H1, complement of H1} + F)-free graphs coincides with the one for the |H|=2 case if and only if F does not include the bull (the only non-empty self-complementary graphs on fewer than five vertices are P_1 and P_4, and P_4-free graphs have clique-width at most 2). Finally, we discuss the consequences of our results for COLOURING
Boundary properties of graphs
A set of graphs may acquire various desirable properties, if we apply suitable restrictions
on the set. We investigate the following two questions: How far, exactly, must one restrict
the structure of a graph to obtain a certain interesting property? What kind of tools are
helpful to classify sets of graphs into those which satisfy a property and those that do not?
Equipped with a containment relation, a graph class is a special example of a partially
ordered set. We introduce the notion of a boundary ideal as a generalisation of a notion
introduced by Alekseev in 2003, to provide a tool to indicate whether a partially ordered set
satisfies a desirable property or not. This tool can give a complete characterisation of lower
ideals defined by a finite forbidden set, into those that satisfy the given property and to
those that do not. In the case of graphs, a lower ideal with respect to the induced subgraph
relation is known as a hereditary graph class.
We study three interrelated types of properties for hereditary graph classes: the existence
of an efficient solution to an algorithmic graph problem, the boundedness of the graph
parameter known as clique-width, and well-quasi-orderability by the induced subgraph relation.
It was shown by Courcelle, Makowsky and Rotics in 2000 that, for a graph class, boundedness
of clique-width immediately implies an efficient solution to a wide range of algorithmic
problems. This serves as one of the motivations to study clique-width. As for well-quasiorderability,
we conjecture that every hereditary graph class that is well-quasi-ordered by
the induced subgraph relation also has bounded clique-width.
We discover the first boundary classes for several algorithmic graph problems, including
the Hamiltonian cycle problem. We also give polynomial-time algorithms for the dominating
induced matching problem, for some restricted graph classes.
After discussing the special importance of bipartite graphs in the study of clique-width,
we describe a general framework for constructing bipartite graphs of large clique-width. As
a consequence, we find a new minimal class of unbounded clique-width.
We prove numerous positive and negative results regarding the well-quasi-orderability of
classes of bipartite graphs. This completes a characterisation of the well-quasi-orderability of
all classes of bipartite graphs defined by one forbidden induced bipartite subgraph. We also
make considerable progress in characterising general graph classes defined by two forbidden
induced subgraphs, reducing the task to a small finite number of open cases. Finally, we
show that, in general, for hereditary graph classes defined by a forbidden set of bounded
finite size, a similar reduction is not usually possible, but the number of boundary classes
to determine well-quasi-orderability is nevertheless finite.
Our results, together with the notion of boundary ideals, are also relevant for the study
of other partially ordered sets in mathematics, such as permutations ordered by the pattern
containment relation
Degree-Constrained Orientation of Maximum Satisfaction: Graph Classes and Parameterized Complexity
The problem Max W-Light (Max W-Heavy) for an undirected graph is to assign a direction to each edge so that the number of vertices of outdegree at most W (resp. at least W) is maximized. It is known that these problems are NP-hard even for fixed W. For example, Max 0-Light is equivalent to the problem of finding a maximum independent set.
In this paper, we show that for any fixed constant W, Max W-Heavy can be solved in linear time for hereditary graph classes for which treewidth is bounded by a function of degeneracy. We show that such graph classes include chordal graphs, circular-arc graphs, d-trapezoid graphs, chordal bipartite graphs, and graphs of bounded clique-width.
To have a polynomial-time algorithm for Max W-Light, we need an additional condition of a polynomial upper bound on the number of potential maximal cliques to apply the metatheorem by Fomin, Todinca, and Villanger [SIAM J. Comput., 44(1):57-87, 2015]. The aforementioned graph classes, except bounded clique-width graphs, satisfy such a condition. For graphs of bounded clique-width, we present a dynamic programming approach not using the metatheorem to show that it is actually polynomial-time solvable for this graph class too.
We also study the parameterized complexity of the problems and show some tractability and intractability results
Boundary properties of graphs
A set of graphs may acquire various desirable properties, if we apply suitable restrictions on the set. We investigate the following two questions: How far, exactly, must one restrict the structure of a graph to obtain a certain interesting property? What kind of tools are helpful to classify sets of graphs into those which satisfy a property and those that do not? Equipped with a containment relation, a graph class is a special example of a partially ordered set. We introduce the notion of a boundary ideal as a generalisation of a notion introduced by Alekseev in 2003, to provide a tool to indicate whether a partially ordered set satisfies a desirable property or not. This tool can give a complete characterisation of lower ideals defined by a finite forbidden set, into those that satisfy the given property and to those that do not. In the case of graphs, a lower ideal with respect to the induced subgraph relation is known as a hereditary graph class. We study three interrelated types of properties for hereditary graph classes: the existence of an efficient solution to an algorithmic graph problem, the boundedness of the graph parameter known as clique-width, and well-quasi-orderability by the induced subgraph relation. It was shown by Courcelle, Makowsky and Rotics in 2000 that, for a graph class, boundedness of clique-width immediately implies an efficient solution to a wide range of algorithmic problems. This serves as one of the motivations to study clique-width. As for well-quasiorderability, we conjecture that every hereditary graph class that is well-quasi-ordered by the induced subgraph relation also has bounded clique-width. We discover the first boundary classes for several algorithmic graph problems, including the Hamiltonian cycle problem. We also give polynomial-time algorithms for the dominating induced matching problem, for some restricted graph classes. After discussing the special importance of bipartite graphs in the study of clique-width, we describe a general framework for constructing bipartite graphs of large clique-width. As a consequence, we find a new minimal class of unbounded clique-width. We prove numerous positive and negative results regarding the well-quasi-orderability of classes of bipartite graphs. This completes a characterisation of the well-quasi-orderability of all classes of bipartite graphs defined by one forbidden induced bipartite subgraph. We also make considerable progress in characterising general graph classes defined by two forbidden induced subgraphs, reducing the task to a small finite number of open cases. Finally, we show that, in general, for hereditary graph classes defined by a forbidden set of bounded finite size, a similar reduction is not usually possible, but the number of boundary classes to determine well-quasi-orderability is nevertheless finite. Our results, together with the notion of boundary ideals, are also relevant for the study of other partially ordered sets in mathematics, such as permutations ordered by the pattern containment relation.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceEngineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)University of Warwick. Centre for Discrete Mathematics and its Applications (DIMAP)GBUnited Kingdo
Minimal classes of graphs of unbounded clique-width defined by finitely many forbidden induced subgraphs
We discover new hereditary classes of graphs that are minimal (with respect
to set inclusion) of unbounded clique-width. The new examples include split
permutation graphs and bichain graphs. Each of these classes is characterised
by a finite list of minimal forbidden induced subgraphs. These, therefore,
disprove a conjecture due to Daligault, Rao and Thomasse from 2010 claiming
that all such minimal classes must be defined by infinitely many forbidden
induced subgraphs.
In the same paper, Daligault, Rao and Thomasse make another conjecture that
every hereditary class of unbounded clique-width must contain a labelled
infinite antichain. We show that the two example classes we consider here
satisfy this conjecture. Indeed, they each contain a canonical labelled
infinite antichain, which leads us to propose a stronger conjecture: that every
hereditary class of graphs that is minimal of unbounded clique-width contains a
canonical labelled infinite antichain.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
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