266 research outputs found

    On uniquely k-determined permutations

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    There are several approaches to study occurrences of consecutive patterns in permutations such as the inclusion-exclusion method, the tree representations of permutations, the spectral approach and others. We propose yet another approach to study occurrences of consecutive patterns in permutations. The approach is based on considering the graph of patterns overlaps, which is a certain subgraph of the de Bruijn graph. While applying our approach, the notion of a uniquely kk-determined permutation appears. We give two criteria for a permutation to be uniquely kk-determined: one in terms of the distance between two consecutive elements in a permutation, and the other one in terms of directed hamiltonian paths in the certain graphs called path-schemes. Moreover, we describe a finite set of prohibitions that gives the set of uniquely kk-determined permutations. Those prohibitions make applying the transfer matrix method possible for determining the number of uniquely kk-determined permutations.Comment: 12 page

    Introduction to Partially Ordered Patterns

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    We review selected known results on partially ordered patterns (POPs) that include co-unimodal, multi- and shuffle patterns, peaks and valleys ((modified) maxima and minima) in permutations, the Horse permutations and others. We provide several (new) results on a class of POPs built on an arbitrary flat poset, obtaining, as corollaries, the bivariate generating function for the distribution of peaks (valleys) in permutations, links to Catalan, Narayna, and Pell numbers, as well as generalizations of few results in the literature including the descent distribution. Moreover, we discuss q-analogue for a result on non-overlapping segmented POPs. Finally, we suggest several open problems for further research.Comment: 23 pages; Discrete Applied Mathematics, to appea

    Generalized pattern avoidance with additional restrictions

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    Babson and Steingr\'{\i}msson introduced generalized permutation patterns that allow the requirement that two adjacent letters in a pattern must be adjacent in the permutation. We consider n-permutations that avoid the generalized pattern 1-32 and whose k rightmost letters form an increasing subword. The number of such permutations is a linear combination of Bell numbers. We find a bijection between these permutations and all partitions of an (nβˆ’1)(n-1)-element set with one subset marked that satisfy certain additional conditions. Also we find the e.g.f. for the number of permutations that avoid a generalized 3-pattern with no dashes and whose k leftmost or k rightmost letters form either an increasing or decreasing subword. Moreover, we find a bijection between n-permutations that avoid the pattern 132 and begin with the pattern 12 and increasing rooted trimmed trees with n+1 nodes.Comment: 18 page

    On graphs with representation number 3

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    A graph G=(V,E)G=(V,E) is word-representable if there exists a word ww over the alphabet VV such that letters xx and yy alternate in ww if and only if (x,y)(x,y) is an edge in EE. A graph is word-representable if and only if it is kk-word-representable for some kk, that is, if there exists a word containing kk copies of each letter that represents the graph. Also, being kk-word-representable implies being (k+1)(k+1)-word-representable. The minimum kk such that a word-representable graph is kk-word-representable, is called graph's representation number. Graphs with representation number 1 are complete graphs, while graphs with representation number 2 are circle graphs. The only fact known before this paper on the class of graphs with representation number 3, denoted by R3\mathcal{R}_3, is that the Petersen graph and triangular prism belong to this class. In this paper, we show that any prism belongs to R3\mathcal{R}_3, and that two particular operations of extending graphs preserve the property of being in R3\mathcal{R}_3. Further, we show that R3\mathcal{R}_3 is not included in a class of cc-colorable graphs for a constant cc. To this end, we extend three known results related to operations on graphs. We also show that ladder graphs used in the study of prisms are 22-word-representable, and thus each ladder graph is a circle graph. Finally, we discuss kk-word-representing comparability graphs via consideration of crown graphs, where we state some problems for further research

    The sigma-sequence and counting occurrences of some patterns, subsequences and subwords

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    We consider sigma-words, which are words used by Evdokimov in the construction of the sigma-sequence. We then find the number of occurrences of certain patterns and subwords in these words.Comment: 10 page

    Crucial and bicrucial permutations with respect to arithmetic monotone patterns

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    A pattern Ο„\tau is a permutation, and an arithmetic occurrence of Ο„\tau in (another) permutation Ο€=Ο€1Ο€2...Ο€n\pi=\pi_1\pi_2...\pi_n is a subsequence Ο€i1Ο€i2...Ο€im\pi_{i_1}\pi_{i_2}...\pi_{i_m} of Ο€\pi that is order isomorphic to Ο„\tau where the numbers i1<i2<...<imi_1<i_2<...<i_m form an arithmetic progression. A permutation is (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-crucial if it avoids arithmetically the patterns 12...k12... k and β„“(β„“βˆ’1)...1\ell(\ell-1)... 1 but its extension to the right by any element does not avoid arithmetically these patterns. A (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-crucial permutation that cannot be extended to the left without creating an arithmetic occurrence of 12...k12... k or β„“(β„“βˆ’1)...1\ell(\ell-1)... 1 is called (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-bicrucial. In this paper we prove that arbitrary long (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-crucial and (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-bicrucial permutations exist for any k,β„“β‰₯3k,\ell\geq 3. Moreover, we show that the minimal length of a (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-crucial permutation is max⁑(k,β„“)(min⁑(k,β„“)βˆ’1)\max(k,\ell)(\min(k,\ell)-1), while the minimal length of a (k,β„“)(k,\ell)-bicrucial permutation is at most 2max⁑(k,β„“)(min⁑(k,β„“)βˆ’1)2\max(k,\ell)(\min(k,\ell)-1), again for k,β„“β‰₯3k,\ell\geq3

    Simple marked mesh patterns

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    In this paper we begin the first systematic study of distributions of simple marked mesh patterns. Mesh patterns were introduced recently by Br\"and\'en and Claesson in connection with permutation statistics. We provide explicit generating functions in several general cases, and develop recursions to compute the numbers in question in some other cases. Certain qq-analogues are discussed. Moreover, we consider two modifications of the notion of a marked mesh pattern and provide enumerative results for them.Comment: 27 page

    The 1-box pattern on pattern avoiding permutations

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    This paper is continuation of the study of the 1-box pattern in permutations introduced by the authors in \cite{kitrem4}. We derive a two-variable generating function for the distribution of this pattern on 132-avoiding permutations, and then study some of its coefficients providing a link to the Fibonacci numbers. We also find the number of separable permutations with two and three occurrences of the 1-box pattern
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