For a non-empty ground set X, finite or infinite, the {\em set-valuation}
or {\em set-labeling} of a given graph G is an injective function f:V(G)→P(X), where P(X) is the power set of the set X. A
set-indexer of a graph G is an injective set-valued function f:V(G)→P(X) such that the function f∗:E(G)→P(X)−{∅} defined by f∗(uv)=f(u)∗f(v) for
every uv∈E(G) is also injective., where ∗ is a binary operation on
sets. An integer additive set-indexer is defined as an injective function
f:V(G)→P(N0) such that the induced function
gf:E(G)→P(N0) defined by gf(uv)=f(u)+f(v) is
also injective, where N0 is the set of all non-negative integers
and P(N0) is its power set. An IASI f is said to be a
strong IASI if ∣f+(uv)∣=∣f(u)∣∣f(v)∣ for every pair of adjacent vertices
u,v in G. In this paper, we critically and creatively review the concepts
and properties of strong integer additive set-valued graphs.Comment: 13 pages, Published. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1407.4677, arXiv:1405.4788, arXiv:1310.626