Trees and Graphs with Non Log-concave Dominating Set Sequence via AI Tools
Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 18:42 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
There exist trees whose dominating set sequences fail to be log-concave at arbitrarily many positions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For every positive integer m there exists a tree whose dominating-set sequence is not log-concave at m or more indices; the tree is obtained by adapting Bautista-Ramos' construction for independent sets. Separate computer-generated examples of both trees and general graphs with the same failure were produced by PatternBoost. Every caterpillar graph has a log-concave dominating-set sequence, and the natural continuous interpolation of the sequence is log-concave for every graph.
What carries the argument
A modification of the Bautista-Ramos ladder-like tree construction that controls the ratios of consecutive dominating-set counts so that several of those ratios fall below 1.
If this is right
- The number of positions where log-concavity can fail can be made arbitrarily large inside the class of trees.
- Caterpillar graphs form a large, explicitly described family that obeys the log-concavity property.
- Replacing the discrete dominating-set sequence by a continuous function yields a log-concave object on every graph.
- Reinforcement-learning search over graph representations can locate small counterexamples that are then turned into infinite families.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same style of construction may produce non-log-concave sequences for other counting functions such as the number of matchings or the number of colorings.
- One could run the same AI search on larger or differently encoded graphs to look for minimal counterexamples or for other broken properties such as unimodality.
- The continuous analogue being always log-concave suggests that the failures in the discrete case are caused by the integer constraints on set sizes rather than by any deeper obstruction.
Load-bearing premise
The change from independent sets to dominating sets in the Bautista-Ramos construction still forces the desired ratios below 1 at the chosen indices.
What would settle it
Pick any m, build the modified tree described for that m, compute its dominating-set numbers d_k for each k, and check whether d_k^2 < d_{k-1} d_{k+1} holds for at least m values of k.
Figures
read the original abstract
We give new examples of graphs and trees with dominating set sequences that are not log-concave. These examples were generated by PatternBoost, a transformer-based reinforcement learning software developed by Charton-Ellenberg-Wagner-Williamson. We also show: for any positive integer $m$, there exists a tree whose dominating set sequence is not log-concave for at least $m$ indices by modifying a similar construction of Bautista-Ramos for the independent set sequence. We show that a large class of caterpillar graphs has log-concave dominating set sequences. A continuous analogue of the sequence is also log-concave for all graphs.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript presents new examples of trees and graphs whose dominating set sequences fail to be log-concave, discovered via the PatternBoost transformer-based reinforcement learning tool. It proves that for any positive integer m there exists a tree whose dominating set sequence is not log-concave at least m indices, obtained by modifying the Bautista-Ramos construction originally developed for independent set sequences. It further shows that a large class of caterpillar graphs has log-concave dominating set sequences and that a continuous analogue of the dominating set sequence is log-concave for all graphs.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the work supplies explicit counterexamples to log-concavity for dominating sets, extending prior results on independent sets, together with positive theorems for caterpillars and a continuous version. The use of AI tools for generating concrete combinatorial examples is a clear strength, as is the explicit construction for arbitrarily many violations and the log-concavity results for restricted graph families. These contributions are likely to stimulate further study of unimodality properties in domination and other graph sequences.
major comments (1)
- [proof of the existence theorem for arbitrary m] The existence result for arbitrary m (modifying the Bautista-Ramos construction): the manuscript asserts that the modification preserves non-log-concavity at the desired indices, but provides no explicit computation of the first several dominating-set numbers d_k nor a direct argument showing that the inequality d_i^2 > d_{i-1}d_{i+1} survives the change from independent-set to dominating-set counting. Because dominating sets and independent sets are related only by inclusion, the modification (e.g., pendant-vertex adjustments) may alter the recurrence or shift the violating positions; without this verification the transfer remains unproven and is load-bearing for the main theorem.
minor comments (2)
- [section on AI-generated examples] The description of the PatternBoost-generated examples should include the explicit dominating-set sequences (or at least the first 10–15 terms) for the reported graphs so that readers can independently confirm the log-concavity failures.
- [final section on continuous analogue] The continuous analogue is stated to be log-concave for all graphs; a brief indication of how the continuous version is defined (e.g., via generating functions or interpolation) would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and constructive feedback. We address the single major comment below and will revise the manuscript to strengthen the presentation of the existence theorem.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The existence result for arbitrary m (modifying the Bautista-Ramos construction): the manuscript asserts that the modification preserves non-log-concavity at the desired indices, but provides no explicit computation of the first several dominating-set numbers d_k nor a direct argument showing that the inequality d_i^2 > d_{i-1}d_{i+1} survives the change from independent-set to dominating-set counting. Because dominating sets and independent sets are related only by inclusion, the modification (e.g., pendant-vertex adjustments) may alter the recurrence or shift the violating positions; without this verification the transfer remains unproven and is load-bearing for the main theorem.
Authors: We agree that the manuscript would benefit from additional explicit verification to make the transfer from the independent-set construction fully rigorous. In the revised version we will add a dedicated subsection containing: (i) direct computation of the first several terms of the dominating-set sequence for the base modified tree, (ii) a short inductive argument showing that the pendant-vertex adjustments increase each d_k by a predictable amount that preserves the strict inequality d_i^2 > d_{i-1}d_{i+1} at the chosen indices, and (iii) a table comparing the relevant ratios before and after modification. This will confirm that the violations survive the change without relying solely on the analogy with independent sets. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: explicit constructions from external references and direct proofs
full rationale
The paper's central existence result for trees with arbitrarily many non-log-concave indices in the dominating set sequence is obtained by modifying the Bautista-Ramos construction (an external reference on independent sets) and verifying the transfer combinatorially. Examples are generated via the external PatternBoost AI tool. Separate theorems establish log-concavity for a large class of caterpillar graphs and for the continuous analogue on all graphs. No step reduces by definition or construction to a fitted input, self-citation chain, or ansatz smuggled from prior author work; the derivation chain consists of explicit combinatorial arguments and external tools, remaining self-contained without circular reductions.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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