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Forbidden Induced Subgraph Characterization of Word-Representable Co-bipartite Graphs

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abstract

A graph $G$ with vertex set $V(G)$ and edge set $E(G)$ is said to be word-representable if there exists a word $w$ over the alphabet $V(G)$ such that, for any two distinct letters $x,y \in V(G)$, the letters $x$ and $y$ alternate in $w$ if and only if $(x,y) \in E(G)$. Equivalently, a graph is word-representable if and only if it admits a semi-transitive orientation, that is, an acyclic orientation in which, for every directed path $v_0 \rightarrow v_1 \rightarrow \cdots \rightarrow v_m$ with $m \ge 2$, either there is no arc between $v_0$ and $v_m$, or, for all $1 \le i < j \le m$, there exists an arc from $v_i$ to $v_j$. In this work, we provide a comprehensive structural and algorithmic characterization of word-representable co-bipartite graphs, a class of graphs whose vertex set can be partitioned into two cliques. This work unifies graph-theoretic and matrix-theoretic perspectives. We first establish that a co-bipartite graph is a circle graph if and only if it is a permutation graph, thereby deriving a minimal forbidden induced subgraph characterization for co-bipartite circle graphs. The central contribution then connects semi-transitivity with the circularly compatible ones property of binary matrices. In addition to the structural characterization, the paper introduces a linear-time recognition algorithm for semi-transitive co-bipartite graphs, utilizing Safe's matrix recognition framework.

fields

cs.FL 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

On Languages Describing Large Graph Classes

cs.FL · 2026-04-21 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

Formal binary languages can represent graph classes by using their words as patterns to define edges, with languages such as palindromes and Dyck words able to describe all graphs or particular graph classes via suitable restrictions.

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  • On Languages Describing Large Graph Classes cs.FL · 2026-04-21 · unverdicted · none · ref 20 · internal anchor

    Formal binary languages can represent graph classes by using their words as patterns to define edges, with languages such as palindromes and Dyck words able to describe all graphs or particular graph classes via suitable restrictions.