Define the neighborhood characteristic of a graph to be s1 - s2 + s3-• • •, where si counts subsets of i vertices that are all adjacent to some vertex outside the subset. This amounts to replacing cliques by neighborhoods in the traditional 'Euler characteristic' (the number of vertices, minus the number of edges, plus the number of triangles, etc.). The neighborhood characteristic can also be calculated by knowing, for all i, j ≥ 2, how many Ki,j subgraphs there are or, through an Euler-Poincarétype theorem, by knowing how those subgraphs are arranged. Chordal bipartite graphs are precisely the graphs for which every nontrivial connected induced subgraph has neighborhood characteristic 2.
CITATION STYLE
McKee, T. A. (2003). The neighborhood characteristic parameter for graphs. Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 10(1 R). https://doi.org/10.37236/1713
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