Flip-Breakability: A Combinatorial Dichotomy for Monadically Dependent Graph Classes
Jan Dreier, Nikolas M\"ahlmann, Szymon Toru\'nczyk

TL;DR
This paper introduces a combinatorial dichotomy for monadically dependent graph classes, providing new characterizations and resolving part of a conjecture relating model-checking tractability to monadic dependence.
Contribution
It offers the first combinatorial characterizations of monadically dependent graph classes through flip-breakability and forbidden subgraphs, advancing understanding of their structure and complexity.
Findings
Characterized monadic dependence via flip-breakability, generalizing previous notions.
Proved model checking is AW[*]-hard on monadically independent classes.
Identified hereditary classes with bounded twin-width or related parameters as monadically dependent.
Abstract
A conjecture in algorithmic model theory predicts that the model-checking problem for first-order logic is fixed-parameter tractable on a hereditary graph class if and only if the class is monadically dependent. Originating in model theory, this notion is defined in terms of logic, and encompasses nowhere dense classes, monadically stable classes, and classes of bounded twin-width. Working towards this conjecture, we provide the first two combinatorial characterizations of monadically dependent graph classes. This yields the following dichotomy. On the structure side, we characterize monadic dependence by a Ramsey-theoretic property called flip-breakability. This notion generalizes the notions of uniform quasi-wideness, flip-flatness, and bounded grid rank, which characterize nowhere denseness, monadic stability, and bounded twin-width, respectively, and played a key role in their…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Advanced Graph Theory Research
