Twin-width VI: the lens of contraction sequences
\'Edouard Bonnet, Eun Jung Kim, Amadeus Reinald, St\'ephan Thomass\'e

TL;DR
This paper explores the twin-width graph invariant through contraction sequences, characterizes various graph classes, offers an alternative proof of Courcelle's theorem, and introduces oriented and partial contraction sequences for broader applications.
Contribution
It characterizes multiple graph classes via contraction sequences, provides a new proof of Courcelle's theorem, and introduces oriented and partial contraction sequences to extend the twin-width framework.
Findings
Bounded twin-width characterizes several well-known graph classes.
An alternative proof of Courcelle's theorem is provided using contraction sequences.
Oriented twin-width classes coincide with standard twin-width classes.
Abstract
A contraction sequence of a graph consists of iteratively merging two of its vertices until only one vertex remains. The recently introduced twin-width graph invariant is based on contraction sequences. More precisely, if one puts red edges between two vertices representing non-homogeneous subsets, the twin-width is the minimum integer such that a contraction sequence keeps red degree at most . By changing the condition imposed on the trigraphs (i.e., graphs with some edges being red) and possibly slightly tweaking the notion of contractions, we show how to characterize the well-established bounded rank-width, tree-width, linear rank-width, path-width, and proper minor-closed classes by means of contraction sequences. As an application we give a transparent alternative proof of the celebrated Courcelle's theorem (actually of its generalization by Courcelle, Makowsky, and Rotics),…
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