Computing the Exchange Number in Graphs with respect to Cycle Convexity
Pith reviewed 2026-05-09 23:47 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Deciding whether the exchange number of a graph under cycle convexity meets or exceeds k is NP-complete even for K5-free graphs.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Given a graph G and positive integer k, deciding whether e_cc(G) ≥ k is NP-complete even if G is K5-free. All n-vertex graphs with exchange number exactly n-1 are characterized. Closed formulas exist for the exchange number of chordal graphs whose blocks lie in a single chain, yielding polynomial-time algorithms. A lower bound holds for the Cartesian product of arbitrary graphs, and explicit formulas are obtained for the exchange number of strong and lexicographic products.
What carries the argument
Cycle-convex sets, where S is cycle-convex if G[S ∪ {v}] contains no cycle through any added vertex v, together with the exchange number e_cc(G) defined as the largest cardinality of an E-independent set in this convexity.
If this is right
- The exchange number cannot be computed in polynomial time for K5-free graphs unless P equals NP.
- Graphs attaining exchange number n-1 are fully described by the given characterization.
- Chordal graphs with blocks forming a single chain admit a closed formula and therefore polynomial-time evaluation.
- Lower bounds and explicit formulas are available for the exchange numbers of Cartesian, strong, and lexicographic products.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The persistence of hardness on K5-free graphs suggests cycle convexity may remain difficult under other forbidden-subgraph restrictions.
- Tractability when blocks are chained points to block-cutvertex structure as the feature that controls computability of the exchange number.
- The product formulas indicate that the exchange number respects certain graph operations, allowing its value on large graphs to be assembled from smaller components.
Load-bearing premise
The reduction establishing NP-completeness maps known hard instances to K5-free graphs while correctly preserving the value of the exchange number.
What would settle it
A polynomial-time algorithm that correctly computes e_cc(G) for every K5-free graph would refute the NP-completeness claim.
Figures
read the original abstract
Given a graph $G$, a subset $S \subseteq V(G)$ is \textit{cycle convex}, if for any vertex $v \in V(G) \setminus S$, the induced subgraph, $G[S \cup \{v\}]$ cannot form a cycle containing the vertex $v$. The \textit{exchange number} of $G$, denoted by $e_{cc}(G)$ is the maximum cardinality of an $\textit{$E$-independent}$ set of $G$. This paper studies the computational complexity of determining the exchange number of graphs and provides exact values for some graph classes. Given a graph $G$ and a positive integer $k$, we show that deciding whether $e_{cc}(G) \geq k$ is NP-complete even if $G$ is a $K_5$-free graph. In contrast, we characterize all $n$-vertex graphs $G$ with exchange number $n-1$ and obtain closed formulas for chordal graphs $G$ whose blocks lie in a single chain, which leads to polynomial-time algorithms for computing $e_{cc}(G)$. We also establish a lower bound for the exchange number of the Cartesian product of general graphs and by using the results of Anand et al. \cite{bijo2}, we derive an explicit formula for the exchange number of strong and lexicographic graph products.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript defines cycle-convex sets and the exchange number e_cc(G) as the size of a maximum E-independent set under cycle convexity. It proves that deciding whether e_cc(G) >= k is NP-complete even for K5-free graphs, characterizes all n-vertex graphs with e_cc(G) = n-1, derives closed formulas for chordal graphs whose blocks form a single chain (yielding polynomial-time algorithms), establishes a lower bound on e_cc for Cartesian products, and obtains explicit formulas for strong and lexicographic products via results of Anand et al.
Significance. The NP-completeness result for K5-free graphs is a solid contribution, showing that the problem remains hard on a natural restricted class. The characterizations and closed formulas for chordal graphs and products supply exact values and efficient computation for concrete families, which is useful for the study of convexity parameters. The lower bound and product formulas extend the reach of the work without introducing new parameters.
minor comments (3)
- [§3] §3 (NP-completeness reduction): the constructed instances should explicitly verify that the reduction preserves K5-freeness; a short paragraph confirming no K5 is created would strengthen the claim.
- [§2] The notation for E-independent sets is introduced without a displayed definition; adding a formal definition box or equation would improve readability.
- [§5] In the product formulas (using Anand et al.), state the precise theorem or corollary from the cited paper that is applied, rather than a general reference.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful summary of our manuscript, the positive assessment of its significance, and the recommendation for minor revision. We appreciate the recognition of the NP-completeness result on K5-free graphs and the contributions on characterizations, formulas, and product graphs.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; minor self-citation for product formulas
full rationale
The paper's core result is an NP-completeness proof for deciding whether e_cc(G) >= k on K5-free graphs, obtained via a standard polynomial reduction from a known NP-complete problem that preserves the K5-free property. This reduction and the characterizations of graphs with e_cc(G) = n-1, plus closed formulas for certain chordal graphs, rest directly on the foundational definitions of cycle-convex sets and E-independent sets without reducing any claim to its own inputs. The sole self-citation (to Anand et al. for strong/lexicographic product formulas) supports a secondary result on products and is not load-bearing for the primary complexity or characterization claims. No step equates a derived quantity to a fitted parameter or prior self-result by construction, so the derivation remains self-contained.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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