Grundy Distinguishes Treewidth from Pathwidth
R\'emy Belmonte, Eun Jung Kim, Michael Lampis, Valia Mitsou, Yota, Otachi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the computational complexity of Grundy Coloring varies significantly across different graph width parameters, being FPT with pathwidth but W[1]-hard with treewidth and para-NP-hard with clique-width, highlighting the nuanced differences among these parameters.
Contribution
The paper provides the first natural example showing the complexity gap between treewidth and pathwidth, and explores how Grundy Coloring's complexity changes with various width parameters.
Findings
Grundy Coloring is FPT with pathwidth.
Grundy Coloring is W[1]-hard with treewidth.
Grundy Coloring is para-NP-hard with clique-width.
Abstract
Structural graph parameters, such as treewidth, pathwidth, and clique-width, are a central topic of study in parameterized complexity. A main aim of research in this area is to understand the "price of generality" of these widths: as we transition from more restrictive to more general notions, which are the problems that see their complexity status deteriorate from fixed-parameter tractable to intractable? This type of question is by now very well-studied, but, somewhat strikingly, the algorithmic frontier between the two (arguably) most central width notions, treewidth and pathwidth, is still not understood: currently, no natural graph problem is known to be W-hard for one but FPT for the other. Indeed, a surprising development of the last few years has been the observation that for many of the most paradigmatic problems, their complexities for the two parameters actually coincide…
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