Any linear ordering of [2]^n has a large subcube that is lexicographic; generalization bounds the number of possible orderings on subcubes of [k]^n by roughly (k-1)! / (2 (ln 2)^k).
Ranked Schr\"oder Trees
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
In biology, a phylogenetic tree is a tool to represent the evolutionary relationship between species. Unfortunately, the classical Schr\"oder tree model is not adapted to take into account the chronology between the branching nodes. In particular, it does not answer the question: how many different phylogenetic stories lead to the creation of n species and what is the average time to get there? In this paper, we enrich this model in two distinct ways in order to obtain two ranked tree models for phylogenetics, i.e. models coding chronology. For that purpose, we first develop a model of (strongly) increasing Schr\"oder trees, symbolically described in the classical context of increasing labeling. Then we introduce a generalization for the labeling with some unusual order constraint in Analytic Combinatorics (namely the weakly increasing trees). Although these models are direct extensions of the Schr\"oder tree model, it appears that they are also in one-to-one correspondence with several classical combinatorial objects. Through the paper, we present these links, exhibit some parameters in typical large trees and conclude the studies with efficient uniform samplers.
fields
math.CO 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Linear orderings of combinatorial cubes
Any linear ordering of [2]^n has a large subcube that is lexicographic; generalization bounds the number of possible orderings on subcubes of [k]^n by roughly (k-1)! / (2 (ln 2)^k).