Proceedings Third Workshop on Graphs as Models
Timo Kehrer (Humboldt-University of Berlin), Alice Miller (University, of Glasgow)

TL;DR
This paper introduces the third edition of the Graphs as Models workshop, highlighting its role in fostering interdisciplinary research on graph-based models across various domains in computer science.
Contribution
It consolidates research from multiple workshops and promotes new ideas and results in graph-based modeling, analysis, and applications in computational science.
Findings
Bridges multiple research areas using graphs as models.
Encourages interdisciplinary collaboration and new applications.
Showcases recent research presented at the GaM workshop.
Abstract
Graphs are used as models in many areas of computer science and computer engineering. For example graphs are used to represent syntax, control and data flow, dependency, state spaces, models such as UML and other types of domain-specific models, and social network graphs. In all of these examples, the graph serves as an intuitive yet mathematically precise foundation for many purposes, both in theory building as well as in practical applications. Graph-based models serve as an abstract communication medium and are used to describe various concepts and phenomena. Moreover, once such graph-based models are constructed, they can be analyzed and transformed to verify the correctness of static and dynamic properties, to discover new properties, to deeply study a particular domain of interest or to produce new equivalent and/or optimized versions of graph-based models. The Graphs as Models…
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