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Note: The Smallest Nonevasive Graph Property

Michał Adamaszek (2014)

Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory

A property of n-vertex graphs is called evasive if every algorithm testing this property by asking questions of the form “is there an edge between vertices u and v” requires, in the worst case, to ask about all pairs of vertices. Most “natural” graph properties are either evasive or conjectured to be such, and of the few examples of nontrivial nonevasive properties scattered in the literature the smallest one has n = 6. We exhibit a nontrivial, nonevasive property of 5-vertex graphs and show that...

On a property of neighborhood hypergraphs

Konrad Pióro (2006)

Commentationes Mathematicae Universitatis Carolinae

The aim of the paper is to show that no simple graph has a proper subgraph with the same neighborhood hypergraph. As a simple consequence of this result we infer that if a clique hypergraph 𝒢 and a hypergraph have the same neighborhood hypergraph and the neighborhood relation in 𝒢 is a subrelation of such a relation in , then is inscribed into 𝒢 (both seen as coverings). In particular, if is also a clique hypergraph, then = 𝒢 .

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