6 research outputs found
Combinatorial Problems on -graphs
Bir\'{o}, Hujter, and Tuza introduced the concept of -graphs (1992),
intersection graphs of connected subgraphs of a subdivision of a graph .
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 -graphs.
We show that for any fixed containing a certain 3-node, 6-edge multigraph
as a minor that the clique problem is APX-hard on -graphs and the
isomorphism problem is isomorphism-complete. We also provide positive results
on -graphs. Namely, when is a cactus the clique problem can be solved in
polynomial time. Also, when a graph has a Helly -representation, the
clique problem can be solved in polynomial time. Finally, we observe that one
can use treewidth techniques to show that both the -clique and list
-coloring problems are FPT on -graphs. These FPT results apply more
generally to treewidth-bounded graph classes where treewidth is bounded by a
function of the clique number
On the complexity of color-avoiding site and bond percolation
The mathematical analysis of robustness and error-tolerance of complex
networks has been in the center of research interest. On the other hand, little
work has been done when the attack-tolerance of the vertices or edges are not
independent but certain classes of vertices or edges share a mutual
vulnerability. In this study, we consider a graph and we assign colors to the
vertices or edges, where the color-classes correspond to the shared
vulnerabilities. An important problem is to find robustly connected vertex
sets: nodes that remain connected to each other by paths providing any type of
error (i.e. erasing any vertices or edges of the given color). This is also
known as color-avoiding percolation. In this paper, we study various possible
modeling approaches of shared vulnerabilities, we analyze the computational
complexity of finding the robustly (color-avoiding) connected components. We
find that the presented approaches differ significantly regarding their
complexity.Comment: 14 page
Families of induced trees and their intersection graphs
This paper is inspired in the well known characterization of chordal graphs as the intersection graphs of subtrees of a tree. We consider families of induced trees of any graph and we prove that their recognition is NP-Complete. A consequence of this fact is that the concept of clique tree of chordal graphs cannot be widely generalized. Finally, we consider the fact that every graph is the intersection graph of induced trees of a bipartite graph and we characterize some classes that arise when we impose restrictions on the host bipartite graph.Facultad de Ciencias Exacta
Structural Characterisations of Hereditary Graph Classes and Algorithmic Consequences
A hole is a chordless cycle of length at least four, and is even or odd depending onthe parity of its length. Many interesting classes of graphs are defined by excluding (possibly among other graphs) holes of certain lengths. Most famously perhaps is the class of Berge graphs, which are the graphs that contain no odd hole and no complement of an odd hole. A graph is perfect if the chromatic number of each of its induced subgraphs is equal to the size of a maximum clique in that subgraph. It was conjectured in the 1960’s by Claude Berge that Berge graphs and perfect graphs are equivalent, that is, a graph is perfect if and only if it is Berge. This conjecture was finally resolved by Chudnovsky, Robertson, Seymour and Thomas in 2002, and it is now called the strong perfect graph theorem.
Graphs that do not contain even holes are structurally similar to Berge graphs, and for this reason Conforti, Cornuéjols, Kapoor and Vušković initiated the study of even-hole-free graphs. One of their main results was a decomposition theorem and a recognition algorithm for even-hole-free graphs, and many techniques developed in the pursuit of a decomposition theorem for even-hole-free graphs proved useful in the study of perfect graphs. Indeed, the proof of the strong perfect graph theorem relied on decomposition, and many interesting graph classes have since then been understood from the viewpoint of decomposition.
In this thesis we study several classes of graphs that relate to even-hole-free graphs. First, we focus on β-perfect graphs, which form a subclass of even-hole-free graphs. While it is unknown whether even-hole-free graphs can be coloured in polynomial time, β-perfect graphs can be coloured optimally in polynomial time using the greedy colouring algorithm. The class of β-perfect graphs was introduced in 1996 by Markossian, Gasparian and Reed, and since then several classes of β-perfect graphs have been identified but no forbidden induced subgraph characterisation is known. In this thesis we identify a new class of β-perfect graphs, and we present forbidden induced subgraph characterisations for the class of β-perfect hyperholes and for the class of claw-free β-perfect graphs. We use these characterisations to decide in polynomial time whether a given hyperhole, or more generally a claw-free graph, is β-perfect.
A graph is l-holed (for an integer l ≥ 4) if every one of its holes is of length l. Another focus of the thesis is the class of l-holed graphs. When l is odd, the l-holed graphs form a subclass of even-hole-free graphs. Together with Preissmann, Robin, Sintiari, Trotignon and Vušković we obtained a structure theorem for l-holed graphs where l ≥ 7. Working independently, Cook and Seymour obtained a structure theorem for the same class of graphs. In this thesis we establish that these two structure theorems are equivalent. Furthermore, we present two recognition algorithms for l-holed graphs for odd l ≥ 7. The firs uses the structure theorem of Preissmann, Robin,
Sintiari, Trotignon, Vušković and the present author, and relies on decomposition by a new variant of a 2-join called a special 2-join, and the second uses the structure theorem of Cook and Seymour, and relies only on a process of clique cutset decomposition. We also give algorithms that solve in polynomial time the maximum clique and maximum stable set problems for l-holed graphs for odd l ≥ 7.
Finally, we focus on circular-arc graphs. It is a long standing open problem to characterise in terms of forbidden induced subgraphs the class of circular-arc graphs, and even the class of chordal circular-arc graphs. Motivated by a result of Cameron, Chap-lick and Hoà ng stating that even-hole-free graphs that are pan-free can be decomposed by clique cutsets into circular-arc graphs, we investigate the class of even-hole-free circular-arc graphs. We present a partial characterisation for the class of even-hole-free circular-arc graphs that are not chordal