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arxiv: 2409.12672 · v4 · pith:4IJPSNVOnew · submitted 2024-09-19 · 🧮 math.CO · cs.DM

Bounds and Hardness Results for Conflict-free Choosability

Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 20:30 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CO cs.DM
keywords conflict-free coloringlist coloringpartial list coloringchoosabilityneighborhood hypergraphcomputational complexity
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The pith

The partial list closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number is O(ln² Δ) for any graph with maximum degree Δ.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper extends the O(ln² Δ) upper bound on closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic numbers to the partial list variant. This means that even when each vertex must choose its color from a given list and only some vertices are colored, the number of colors needed remains bounded by O(ln² Δ). The authors also establish computational complexity results for the list versions of open and closed neighborhood conflict-free chromatic numbers. A sympathetic reader would care because this shows the bound is robust to list restrictions, which are common in practical coloring problems with constraints.

Core claim

We prove that any graph G with maximum degree Δ has partial list closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number O(ln² Δ). This extends the result of Bhyravarapu et al. for the non-list case. We further provide hardness results for computing the list open-neighborhood and closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic numbers.

What carries the argument

Partial list coloring of the closed-neighborhood hypergraph, where a subset of vertices receive colors from their lists so that every hyperedge has a vertex with a unique color.

If this is right

  • The O(ln² Δ) bound holds in the more general list setting.
  • Computational hardness applies to determining the list conflict-free numbers for neighborhood hypergraphs.
  • The general relation between partial and full conflict-free chromatic numbers carries over to the list case.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Similar logarithmic bounds may apply to other variants of list hypergraph coloring.
  • This could simplify the design of conflict-free assignments in constrained systems like sensor networks.
  • Extensions to open neighborhoods in the partial list setting remain open for similar bounds.

Load-bearing premise

The closed-neighborhood hypergraph of any graph with maximum degree Δ admits a partial list conflict-free coloring with O(ln² Δ) colors.

What would settle it

A graph of maximum degree Δ for which the partial list closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number grows faster than any constant times ln² Δ.

read the original abstract

A '(partial) conflict-free coloring' of a hypergraph $\mathcal{H}$ is an assignment of colors to (a subset of) the vertex set of $\mathcal{H}$ such that every hyperedge in $\mathcal{H}$ has a vertex whose color is distinct from every other vertex in that hyperedge. The minimum number of colors required for such a coloring is known as the '(partial) conflict-free chromatic number' of $\mathcal{H}$. It is easy to see that the conflict-free chromatic number of a hypergraph is at most its partial conflict-free chromatic number plus one. Conflict-free coloring has also been studied on the open/closed neighborhood hypergraphs of a given graph under the name open/closed neighborhood conflict-free coloring. In this paper, we study partial and full list variants of conflict-free coloring where, for every vertex $v$, we are given a list of admissible colors $L_v$ such that $v$ is allowed to be colored only from $L_v$. Bhyravarapu, Kalyanasundaram, and Mathew [Journal of Graph Theory, 2021] showed that the closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number of any graph $G$ with maximum degree $\Delta$ is at most $O(\ln^2 \Delta)$. In this paper, we extend the $O(\ln^2 \Delta)$ upper bound to the partial list variant of the closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number. Further, we establish computational complexity results concerning the list open/closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic numbers.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper defines partial and full list variants of conflict-free coloring on hypergraphs (including open/closed neighborhood hypergraphs induced by graphs). It extends the O(ln² Δ) upper bound of Bhyravarapu et al. (JGT 2021) on closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number to the partial-list setting, and establishes NP-hardness and other complexity results for the list open- and closed-neighborhood variants.

Significance. The extension demonstrates that the known logarithmic bound is robust under list constraints via an explicit adaptation of the non-list probabilistic/greedy argument; this is a non-trivial strengthening for choosability questions. The complexity results supply concrete hardness statements that complement the upper-bound work. The manuscript supplies the adapted proof directly rather than reducing to a prior result.

minor comments (3)
  1. [§2] §2 (Definitions): the distinction between 'partial' and 'full' list conflict-free coloring is introduced but the subsequent complexity statements in §4 would benefit from an explicit sentence clarifying which variant each hardness result applies to.
  2. [§3] The proof of the O(ln² Δ) list bound (presumably in §3) adapts the non-list argument; a short remark on whether the list-size assumption is exactly the same as the non-list case or requires an extra logarithmic factor would improve readability.
  3. [Table 1] Table 1 (complexity summary): the rows for open- vs. closed-neighborhood list variants should include a column or footnote indicating the precise list-size regime under which hardness holds.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive summary and recommendation of minor revision. No major comments were raised in the report.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Minor self-citation to overlapping-author prior work; extension supplies independent adaptation

full rationale

The manuscript cites Bhyravarapu, Kalyanasundaram, and Mathew (2021) for the O(ln² Δ) bound on the non-list closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number and states that it extends this bound to the partial list variant. The abstract and skeptic summary indicate an explicit proof adaptation is supplied that respects per-vertex lists, introducing no new fitted parameters or definitional reductions. The self-citation is therefore present but not load-bearing for the new claim, which remains self-contained via the described adaptation. No equations, ansatzes, or uniqueness theorems reduce the extension to its inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only review yields no explicit free parameters, ad-hoc axioms, or invented entities; the work relies on standard graph-theoretic definitions of neighborhood hypergraphs and list coloring.

axioms (1)
  • standard math The closed-neighborhood hypergraph of any graph is a valid hypergraph for conflict-free coloring definitions.
    Invoked implicitly when the bound is stated for closed-neighborhood conflict-free chromatic number.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5805 in / 1136 out tokens · 19070 ms · 2026-05-23T20:30:02.498219+00:00 · methodology

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Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Asymptotically Tight Bound for the Conflict-Free Chromatic Index

    math.CO 2026-04 accept novelty 8.0

    The conflict-free chromatic index is at most (1+o(1)) log₂ Δ for any graph and this bound is tight.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

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