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On merge-models

Hector Buffière, Yuquan Lin, Jaroslav Nešet{ř}il, Patrice {Ossona de Mendez}, Sebastian Siebertz

Abstract

Tree-ordered weakly sparse models have recently emerged as a robust framework for representing structures in an ``almost sparse'' way, while allowing the structure to be reconstructed through a simple first-order interpretation. A prominent example is given by twin-models, which are bounded twin-width tree-ordered weakly sparse representations of structures with bounded twin-width derived from contraction sequences. In this paper, we develop this perspective further. First, we show that twin-models can be chosen such that they preserve linear clique-width or clique-width up to a constant factor. Then, we introduce \emph{merge-models}, a natural analog of twin-models for merge-width. Merge-models represent binary relational structures by tree-ordered weakly sparse structures. The original structures can then be recovered by a fixed first-order interpretation. A merge-model can be constructed from a merge sequence. Then, its radius-$r$ merge-width will be, up to a constant factor, bounded by the radius-$r$ width of the merge sequence from which it is derived. Finally, we show that twin-models arise naturally as special cases of merge-models, and that binary structures with bounded twin-width are exactly those having a loopless merge-model with bounded radius-$r_0$ merge-width (for some sufficiently large constant $r_0$).

On merge-models

Abstract

Tree-ordered weakly sparse models have recently emerged as a robust framework for representing structures in an ``almost sparse'' way, while allowing the structure to be reconstructed through a simple first-order interpretation. A prominent example is given by twin-models, which are bounded twin-width tree-ordered weakly sparse representations of structures with bounded twin-width derived from contraction sequences. In this paper, we develop this perspective further. First, we show that twin-models can be chosen such that they preserve linear clique-width or clique-width up to a constant factor. Then, we introduce \emph{merge-models}, a natural analog of twin-models for merge-width. Merge-models represent binary relational structures by tree-ordered weakly sparse structures. The original structures can then be recovered by a fixed first-order interpretation. A merge-model can be constructed from a merge sequence. Then, its radius- merge-width will be, up to a constant factor, bounded by the radius- width of the merge sequence from which it is derived. Finally, we show that twin-models arise naturally as special cases of merge-models, and that binary structures with bounded twin-width are exactly those having a loopless merge-model with bounded radius- merge-width (for some sufficiently large constant ).

Paper Structure

This paper contains 10 sections, 24 equations, 1 figure.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: For the same graph, a contraction sequence and its associated twin-model, and a merge sequence and its associated (compact) merge-model (green edges represent revealed non-adjacencies and purple ones revealed adjacencies).

Theorems & Definitions (19)

  • Definition 1
  • Definition 2
  • Definition 3
  • Definition 4
  • proof
  • proof
  • Definition 5
  • Definition 6: Hat of a pair of leaves
  • Definition 7: Interpretation $\mathop{\mathrm{\sf Str}}\nolimits$
  • proof
  • ...and 9 more