52 research outputs found

    Extending Utility Representations of Partial Orders

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    The problem is considered as to whether a monotone function defined on a subset P of a Euclidean space can be strictly monotonically extended to the whole space. It is proved that this is the case if and only if the function is {\em separably increasing}. Explicit formulas are given for a class of extensions which involves an arbitrary bounded increasing function. Similar results are obtained for monotone functions that represent strict partial orders on arbitrary abstract sets X. The special case where P is a Pareto subset is considered.Comment: 15 page

    The graph bottleneck identity

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    A matrix S=(sij)∈RnΓ—nS=(s_{ij})\in{\mathbb R}^{n\times n} is said to determine a \emph{transitional measure} for a digraph GG on nn vertices if for all i,j,k∈{1,.Λ™.,n},i,j,k\in\{1,\...,n\}, the \emph{transition inequality} sijsjk≀siksjjs_{ij} s_{jk}\le s_{ik} s_{jj} holds and reduces to the equality (called the \emph{graph bottleneck identity}) if and only if every path in GG from ii to kk contains jj. We show that every positive transitional measure produces a distance by means of a logarithmic transformation. Moreover, the resulting distance d(β‹…,β‹…)d(\cdot,\cdot) is \emph{graph-geodetic}, that is, d(i,j)+d(j,k)=d(i,k)d(i,j)+d(j,k)=d(i,k) holds if and only if every path in GG connecting ii and kk contains jj. Five types of matrices that determine transitional measures for a digraph are considered, namely, the matrices of path weights, connection reliabilities, route weights, and the weights of in-forests and out-forests. The results obtained have undirected counterparts. In [P. Chebotarev, A class of graph-geodetic distances generalizing the shortest-path and the resistance distances, Discrete Appl. Math., URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dam.2010.11.017] the present approach is used to fill the gap between the shortest path distance and the resistance distance.Comment: 12 pages, 18 references. Advances in Applied Mathematic

    Which Digraphs with Ring Structure are Essentially Cyclic?

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    We say that a digraph is essentially cyclic if its Laplacian spectrum is not completely real. The essential cyclicity implies the presence of directed cycles, but not vice versa. The problem of characterizing essential cyclicity in terms of graph topology is difficult and yet unsolved. Its solution is important for some applications of graph theory, including that in decentralized control. In the present paper, this problem is solved with respect to the class of digraphs with ring structure, which models some typical communication networks. It is shown that the digraphs in this class are essentially cyclic, except for certain specified digraphs. The main technical tool we employ is the Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind. A by-product of this study is a theorem on the zeros of polynomials that differ by one from the products of Chebyshev polynomials of the second kind. We also consider the problem of essential cyclicity for weighted digraphs and enumerate the spanning trees in some digraphs with ring structure.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, Advances in Applied Mathematics: accepted for publication (2010) http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aam.2010.01.00

    Matrices of forests, analysis of networks, and ranking problems

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    The matrices of spanning rooted forests are studied as a tool for analysing the structure of networks and measuring their properties. The problems of revealing the basic bicomponents, measuring vertex proximity, and ranking from preference relations / sports competitions are considered. It is shown that the vertex accessibility measure based on spanning forests has a number of desirable properties. An interpretation for the stochastic matrix of out-forests in terms of information dissemination is given.Comment: 8 pages. This article draws heavily from arXiv:math/0508171. Published in Proceedings of the First International Conference on Information Technology and Quantitative Management (ITQM 2013). This version contains some corrections and addition

    Second-Order Agents on Ring Digraphs

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    The paper addresses the problem of consensus seeking among second-order linear agents interconnected in a specific ring topology. Unlike the existing results in the field dealing with one-directional digraphs arising in various cyclic pursuit algorithms or two-directional graphs, we focus on the case where some arcs in a two-directional ring graph are dropped in a regular fashion. The derived condition for achieving consensus turns out to be independent of the number of agents in a network.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
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