Classifying grounded intersection graphs via ordered forbidden patterns
Laurent Feuilloley, Michel Habib

TL;DR
This paper explores how grounded intersection graphs can be characterized by forbidden ordered patterns, providing new insights into their classification, hierarchy, and recognition complexity.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive survey of grounded intersection graph classes, establishes new pattern characterizations for geometric classes, and discusses recognition complexity and open problems.
Findings
Hierarchy of grounded intersection graphs is tightly interleaved with four-vertex pattern classes.
Forbidden patterns serve as effective tools for classifying grounded intersection graphs.
Recognition complexity varies, with several open problems identified.
Abstract
It was noted already in the 90s that many classic graph classes, such as interval, chordal, and bipartite graphs, can be characterized by the existence of an ordering of the vertices avoiding some ordered subgraphs, called patterns. Very recently, all the classes corresponding to patterns on three vertices (including the ones mentioned above) have been listed, and proved to be efficiently recognizable. In contrast, very little is known about patterns on four vertices. One of the few graph classes characterized by a pattern on four vertices is the class of intersection graphs of rectangles that are said to be grounded on a line. This class appears naturally in the study of intersection graphs, and similar grounded classes have recently attracted a lot of attention. This paper contains three parts. First, we make a survey of grounded intersection graph classes, summarizing all the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Graph Theory Research · Graph Labeling and Dimension Problems · Limits and Structures in Graph Theory
