The Enclaveless Competition Game
Michael A. Henning, Douglas F. Rall

TL;DR
This paper explores a game involving selecting enclaveless vertex sets in graphs, proving a conjecture that the game length is at least half the number of vertices for certain graph classes.
Contribution
It introduces the competition-enclaveless game, studies its properties, and proves the conjecture for regular and claw-free graphs.
Findings
Proves the conjecture for regular graphs.
Proves the conjecture for claw-free graphs.
Analyzes the properties of the competition-enclaveless game.
Abstract
For a subset of vertices in a graph , a vertex is an enclave of if and all of its neighbors are in , where a neighbor of is a vertex adjacent to . A set is enclaveless if it does not contain any enclaves. The enclaveless number of is the maximum cardinality of an enclaveless set in . As first observed in 1997 by Slater [J. Res. Nat. Bur. Standards 82 (1977), 197--202], if is a graph with vertices, then where is the well-studied domination number of . In this paper, we continue the study of the competition-enclaveless game introduced in 2001 by Phillips and Slater [Graph Theory Notes N. Y. 41 (2001), 37--41] and defined as follows. Two players take turns in constructing a maximal enclaveless set , where one player, Maximizer, tries to maximize and one player, Minimizer, tries…
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