Containment Graphs, Posets, and Related Classes of Graphs
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 20:12 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Classes of graphs and posets are characterized by exact containment representations using sets from a given family Z.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A graph G is a Z-containment graph when vertices receive sets from Z so that two vertices are adjacent precisely if one set contains the other. A poset P is a Z-containment poset when the order holds precisely under set containment. The paper characterizes the classes of posets and graphs that possess these representations for specific Z, extends the results to injective containment, supplies analogous characterizations for intersection, overlap, and disjointedness classes, and proves that no characterization theorem exists for strong containment classes.
What carries the argument
The Z-containment representation, equating edges or order relations exactly with containment between assigned sets from family Z.
If this is right
- Containment graphs formed by iso-oriented boxes in d-dimensional space form a well-defined and characterizable class.
- Injective containment classes of graphs and posets admit the same style of characterizations as the non-injective versions.
- Intersection, overlap, and disjointedness classes of graphs receive parallel representation characterizations.
- Strong containment classes of graphs admit no characterization theorem of the same form.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The characterizations may yield recognition algorithms for the corresponding geometric graph classes.
- The containment framework connects representation theorems across different geometric relations.
- Similar results could be sought for additional set families such as disks or axis-aligned polygons.
Load-bearing premise
The target classes must permit an assignment of sets from the chosen family Z such that containment holds exactly when the edge or order relation is present, with no extra containments forced by the geometry of the sets.
What would settle it
A graph or poset that satisfies the abstract definition of a Z-containment class yet admits no assignment of sets from Z that realizes the edges or relations without introducing extraneous containments.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this paper, we introduce the notion of the containment graph of a family of sets and containment classes of graphs and posets. Let $Z$ be a family of nonempty sets. We call a (simple, finite) graph G = (V, E) a $Z$-containment graph provided one can assign to each vertex $v_i \in V $ a set $S_i \in Z$ such that $v_i v_j \in E$ if and only if $S_i \subset S_j$ or $S_j \subset S_i$ . Similarly, we call a (strict) partially ordered set $P = (V, <)$ a $Z$-containment poset if to each $v_i \in V $ we can assign a set $S_i \in Z$ such that $v_i < v_j$ if and only if $S_i \subset S_j$. Obviously, $G$ is the comparability graph of $P$. We give some basic results on containment graphs and investigate the containment graphs of iso-oriented boxes in $d$-space. We present a characterization of those classes of posets and graphs that have containment representations by sets of a specific type, and we extend our results to ``injective'' containment classes. After that we discuss similar characterizations for intersection, overlap, and disjointedness classes of graphs. Finally, in the last section we discuss the nonexistence of a characterization theorem for ``strong'' containment classes of graphs.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper defines Z-containment graphs (edges iff mutual containment of assigned sets from family Z) and Z-containment posets (relations iff containment), notes that the graph is the comparability graph of the poset, gives basic results, characterizes the classes admitting representations by iso-oriented boxes in d-space, extends the results to injective containment, provides analogous characterizations for intersection/overlap/disjointedness classes, and proves non-existence of a characterization theorem for strong containment classes.
Significance. If the stated characterizations hold, the work supplies a systematic treatment of containment representations that complements existing intersection-graph theory and supplies both positive classification results (for boxes and related families) and a negative result (for strong containment). The injective extension and the discussion of related classes (intersection, overlap, disjointedness) broaden the scope.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: 'disjointedness' appears to be a typographical variant of the standard term 'disjointness'; confirm the intended terminology in the body.
- [Abstract] Abstract: the phrase 'Obviously, G is the comparability graph of P' is correct by the given definitions but could be stated once in the body rather than repeated if the paper re-derives it.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their summary of the manuscript. The description accurately reflects the paper's contributions on Z-containment graphs and posets, including characterizations for iso-oriented boxes, the injective case, related intersection/overlap/disjointedness classes, and the nonexistence result for strong containment. No specific major comments were provided in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper introduces standard biconditional definitions for Z-containment graphs and posets (edge/relation holds iff one set contains the other) and derives characterizations for specific families such as iso-oriented boxes in d-space, plus extensions to injective cases and non-existence results for strong containment. These steps rest on explicit set assignments and geometric properties of Z rather than any fitted parameter renamed as prediction, self-citation chain, or self-definitional reduction. The central claims are independent mathematical statements about which poset/graph classes admit exact representations; no load-bearing step collapses to its own inputs by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Graphs are simple and finite
- standard math Posets are strict partial orders
invented entities (1)
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Z-containment graph
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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discussion (0)
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