UID:
almahu_9948621648202882
Umfang:
XII, 392 p.
,
online resource.
Ausgabe:
1st ed. 2003.
ISBN:
9783540398905
Serie:
Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2880
Inhalt:
The 29th International Workshop on Graph-Theoretic Concepts in Computer Science(WG2003)washeldintheMennorodeconferenceCenterinElspeet,The Netherlands.TheworkshopwasorganizedbytheCenterforAlgorithmicSystems of the Institute of Information and Computing Sciences of Utrecht University. The workshop took place June 19-21, 2003. The 72 participants of WG 2003 came from universities and research institutes from 18 di?erent countries and ?ve di?erent continents. The workshop looks back at a long tradition. It was ?rst held in 1975, and has been held 20 times in Germany, twice in Austria, and once in Italy, Slo- kia, Switzerland, and the Czech Republic, and has now been held for the third time in The Netherlands. The workshop aims at uniting theory and practice by demonstrating how graph-theoretic concepts can be applied to various areas in computerscience,orbyextractingnewproblemsfromapplications.Itisdevoted to the theoretical and practical aspects of graph concepts in computer science. The goal is to present recent research results and to identify and explore - rections of future research. The talks given at the workshop showed how recent research results from algorithmic graph theory can be used in computer science and which graph-theoretic questions arise from new developments in computer science.
Anmerkung:
Invited Lecture -- Blow-Ups, Win/Win's, and Crown Rules: Some New Directions in FPT -- Matching, Edge-Colouring, and Dimers -- Regular Papers -- Minimum Flow Time Graph Ordering -- Searching Is Not Jumping -- Incremental Integration Tools for Chemical Engineering: An Industrial Application of Triple Graph Grammars -- The Minimum Degree Heuristic and the Minimal Triangulation Process -- Generalized Parametric Multi-terminal Flows Problem -- Canonical Decomposition of Outerplanar Maps and Application to Enumeration, Coding, and Generation -- The Complexity of the Matching-Cut Problem for Planar Graphs and Other Graph Classes -- Tree Spanners for Bipartite Graphs and Probe Interval Graphs -- A Simple Linear Time LexBFS Cograph Recognition Algorithm -- Backbone Colorings for Networks -- Greedy Edge-Disjoint Paths in Complete Graphs -- Graph-Based Approaches to Software Watermarking -- Completely Connected Clustered Graphs -- An FPT Algorithm for Set Splitting -- Drawing Planar Graphs on a Curve -- Tree-Partitions of k-Trees with Applications in Graph Layout -- Resource Allocation Problems in Multifiber WDM Tree Networks -- An Improved Upper Bound on the Crossing Number of the Hypercube -- NCE Graph Grammars and Clique-Width -- Chordal Probe Graphs -- Subgraph Induced Planar Connectivity Augmentation -- On the Recognition of General Partition Graphs -- Short Cycles in Planar Graphs -- Complexity of Hypergraph Coloring and Seidel's Switching -- Feedback Vertex Set and Longest Induced Path on AT-Free Graphs -- The Complexity of Graph Contractions -- Tree Spanners, Cayley Graphs, and Diametrically Uniform Graphs -- The Probabilistic Minimum Coloring Problem -- Recognizing Bipolarizable and P 4-Simplicial Graphs -- Coloring Powers of Graphs of Bounded Clique-Width -- Erratum -- Erratum: Cycles in Generalized Networks.
In:
Springer Nature eBook
Weitere Ausg.:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783662206874
Weitere Ausg.:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783540204527
Sprache:
Englisch
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1007/b93953
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